Smart, talented, bright, extraordinary, strong, keen, are just a couple. Dogs are amazing.
Vivid
dog
As a prepositional phrase, it can be either, but more properly an adverb phrase. He studied the digestive process in dogs. (adjective, meaning of dogs) The disease is often found in dogs. (adverb)
playful
Dog is a noun; came is a verb.
The word "vivid" is an adjective.
Viva, Vivacious, lively, vivid.
Professional dog trainer
yes
No, it is not. It is the adverb form of the adjective vivid (bright, clear).
Magnificent is not a verb, it is an adjective, but it would qualify as "vivid", yes.
adjective: awesome
No. It is neither vivid nor an adjective; it is the simple past tense form of a descriptive verb.To be an adjective, it has to modify a noun; to be vivid, it has to create a striking picture in the reader's imagination. 'Walked' does neither.An example of a vivid adjective would be 'rushing', as in rushing ants: it modifies the (plural) noun 'ants' and gives the reader a mental picture of an ant colony darting about at random.
Ginormous is not a verb. It is an adjective.
No, it is an adjective. It can mean clear, distinct, or bright.
Not really, try the most ambrosial.
There usually is. "The dog is wet." is a sentence containing a noun (dog) a verb (is) and an adjective (wet) with the definite article (the) thrown in for good measure.