The adjective that modifies "kittens" in this sentence is "starving."
Kittens are not a simple subject are an animal that has no love for you
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fluffy, sweet, soft, painful
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The boy scouts found a litter of starving kittens in the park last week? The boy scouts found a litter of starving
Mischievous is an adjective (unless it is a person's name, then it's a proper noun).Ex. Two mischievous kittens were playing together. (mischievous is the adjective, which describes the noun, which is kittens)
The predicate is 'four kittens'.
The heredity of these kittens is in question.
As a noun, the word young is an uncountable noun. Young is also an adjective. In the example, 'A mother cat tending her young.', if you wanted to stress that there were more than one young, you would word the sentence, 'A mother cat tending her young kittens', adding the noun and turning 'young' into an adjective.
I frantically scrambled to corral the escaping kittens.
The mother cat was very affectionate towards her kittens.
I awakened to find newborn kittens in my bed.
no unless the male was starving, starving, starving to death and the kitten was little, but this is highly unlikely. Also, males usually don't stick around to raise the kittens so they aren't near the kittens.
Mischief is spelled incorrectly.
A mother cat will pick up her kittens by the scruff of their necks.
Yes there can!