NEW and THAT are adjectives.
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
the surgeon brought a beautiful, new house
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.
He bought New York from the Indians.
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
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.
He just bought a new house in Hove, near Brighton