I am from South Dakota: pretty much the heart of the Midwest. South Dakota is sort of split into two regions that can mostly describe the Midwest in general. East River contains the Black Hills and, of course, the famous giant faces and is somewhat mountainous and far more interesting than West River, which is flat, farm land.
Flat and farm-y is how I would describe Midwestern geography. Oh, and bi-polar because there are random areas of flooding (example, Omaha, NE) and Minnesota is full of trees and hills.
Sincerely,
A proud South Dakotan
Ambitious, courteous, energetic, generous and likeable are self-describing words. Neighborly, sincere, witty and youthful are self-describing words.
Junk food.
graceful
Incredible and interesting
Nouns are not describing words, a noun is a word for a person, place, thing, or idea. Adjectives are words that describe nouns, for example the adjective rural describing the noun people.Some adjectives that might describe rural people are:rusticbucoliccommonsimpleunsophisticatedhard workingknowledgeableindustriouscreativewise
· Andover, Kansas
not that related and the words are- lithosphere hydrosphere atmosphere
· Xenia, Ohio
geology. from the words geo (γή) and logos (λόγος).
Some words related to Gaea or Ge include Earth, Gaia (an alternate spelling for Gaea), geography, geology, and geochemistry.
Synonyms: Yesterday, background, past, backstory Related words: Biography, geography, culture, civics, place, time, record, economy, timeline.
Ambitious, courteous, energetic, generous and likeable are self-describing words. Neighborly, sincere, witty and youthful are self-describing words.
Julia's last words about a "speckled band" were in fact describing "a swamp adder, the deadliest snake in India" see related link
Athletic, ambitious and able are self describing words. Annoying, awkward and abrupt are self describing.
No, a linking word is a verb and a describing word is an adjective.
As an adjective describing female and male words, "stor". As an adjective describing neutral words, "stort"
Dark.