NEW and THAT are adjectives.
In the sentence "Yesterday he played loudly with his two new puppies in their very big backyard," the parts of speech for each word are as follows: "Yesterday" (adverb), "he" (pronoun), "played" (verb), "loudly" (adverb), "with" (preposition), "his" (pronoun), "two" (adjective), "new" (adjective), "puppies" (noun), "in" (preposition), "their" (pronoun), "very" (adverb), "big" (adjective), and "backyard" (noun).
The adjective is the word NEW. It describes what kind of cloth being discussed.
Subject: Have Jon and Claire bought a new car?Object: Have John and Claire bought a new car?
Both the noun form and the adjective are merchant, an alternate adjective is mercantile. Example uses:As a noun: The new merchant on the block is a used book seller.As an adjective: His new job is on a merchant ship; no tips but no angry passengers.Alternate adjective: They run a wholesale business with a mercantile shop attached.
Some adjectives that could describe a year are: bad good hot cold dry wet interesting leap dull productive unproductive
adverb - yesterday adjective - new
The direct object = shoesSubject = Harveyverb = boughtnew = adjective describing shoesyesterday = adverb modifying bought
Bought is a verb. An adjective describes something. A verb is an action, or what you are doing. For example "I bought a new computer." The action is you buying the computer(bought). And the adjective would be "new" because it describes the computer.
I bought a new bedspread yesterday.
No, the word "bought" is not an adverb.the word "bought" is a verb ("I bought some new shoes"). Sometimes it can also be an adjective, particularly in the United States ("this pie is store-bought").
We bought new pants at American Eagle yesterday.
The surgeon bought a beautiful new house. The - article surgeon - noun bought - verb a - article beautiful - adjective new - adjective house - noun (direct object) http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/GRAMMAR/definitions.htm
In the sentence "Yesterday he played loudly with his two new puppies in their very big backyard," the parts of speech for each word are as follows: "Yesterday" (adverb), "he" (pronoun), "played" (verb), "loudly" (adverb), "with" (preposition), "his" (pronoun), "two" (adjective), "new" (adjective), "puppies" (noun), "in" (preposition), "their" (pronoun), "very" (adverb), "big" (adjective), and "backyard" (noun).
He bought New York from the Indians.
new york
The word "new" can be used as both an adjective and a verb. As an adjective, it describes a noun as being recent or not previously known. As a verb, it can mean to make something new or to start fresh.
No.Have is a verb. It can be a main verb:I have a new car.Or it can be an auxiliary verb:I have bought a new car.