Referring to flowers in general, it is "floral." The word flowering (present participle of to flower) is also an adjective for a plant that bears flowers.
Beautiful, scented, colorful, fragrant, fragile, and delicate.
The adjective form for the noun synthesis is synthetic. Example use: Synthetic flowers don't need to be watered.
Middle Eastern is the only proper adjective in the sentence above. It describes "greenhouses."
The word 'always' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.Examples:We always go to grandma's for the holidays. (modifies the verb)My always thoughtful neighbor gave me the flowers. (modifies the adjective)This part of the piece is always slowly played. (modifies the adverb)
The word little is:an indefinite pronoun, 'Little is known about his early life.'an adjective, 'We have a little money left over.'an adverb, 'She made little of my faux pas.The word blue is: a noun, 'We painted the kitchen blue and yellow.'an adjective, 'I like the blue dress best.'a verb, 'They blue the whites to make them so bright.'The word five is: noun, 'I'll meet you there at five.'adjective (determiner), 'Give me five minutes.'The word those is: demonstrative pronoun, 'Those are mom's favorite flowers.'adjective, 'Those flowers are mom's favorite.'
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
The word "are" is the verb in the sentence "The flowers are very pretty."."The", is an article"flowers", is a noun"are", is a verb"very", is an adjective modifying "flowers""pretty" is an adjective modifying "flowers"
Referring to flowers in general, it is "floral." The word flowering (present participle of to flower) is also an adjective for a plant that bears flowers.
No, the word "tropical" is an adjective used to describe things related to the tropics, such as tropical climate or tropical fruits.
The adjective form for the noun synthesis is synthetic. Example use: Synthetic flowers don't need to be watered.
Yes, blooming can be used as an adjective. The blooming flowers look beautiful.
Either the silk in silk flowers or the casual in casual observer.
Cut is an adjective in that sentence. It describes the noun flowers.
sita is having colourful flowers with her.
The "floral" smell of most flowers is sweet or fragrant. Some are too sweet. Some might be described as aromatic.
No, it is not. It is a plural noun. A sunflower is a genus of flowering plants with particularly large flowers.
Your answer is millefleur.The word millefleur is an adjective. In French it literally means "thousand flowers".One definition of millefleur is "a background with a pattern of flowers and plants".
It is both an adjective and a pronoun It's not an adjective, it's either a demonstrative pronoun or demonstrative determiner (determiners are words like 'the' and 'a'). Pronoun use: Those look pretty. Determiner use: Those flowers look pretty.The word 'those' is not an adjective. An adjective is something that describes a noun.