indomitable
The word 'through' is a preposition, an adjective, and an adverb.A preposition is a word preceding a noun or pronoun and showing a relation to another word or element, for example:The ball was thrown through the window.An adjective is a word that describes a noun, for example:There is a through flight that takes off a six.An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb, for example:My feet are wet through to my socks.
Yes, the word 'through' is an adjective, a preposition, and an adverb.Examples:Highway twenty is the through route. (adjective, describes the noun 'route')When I finish this answer, I'm through. (predicate adjective, restates the subject 'I')The ball went through a window. (preposition, 'a window' is the object of the preposition)We came through without a scratch. (adverb, modifies the verb 'came')
Weak describes the Articles of Confederation.
Move Wind Flow
The possessive form of the word auditorium in a sentence that describes the curtains that belong to the auditorium, would be the auditorium's (singular possessive). If you wanted to describe 3 auditoriums with the same curtains, you would write auditoriums' (apostrophe s for plural possessive). The auditorium's curtains were gold with black trim. The auditorium's curtains were gold with black trim in New York City, but two other auditoriums' curtains in Atlanta, George were black with gold trim. I study auditoriums' curtains as a hobby, but I have yet to find one auditorium's curtains have polka dots.
Beating.
Actually, "the auditorium curtains" would be correct, and does away with the need for the pesky apostrophe.
! opened my curtains this morning =)
Renewable, or inexhaustible.
There is no antonym word for curtains, but you can say something like "Revealing"
The word is spelled curtains. Example: The woman opened the curtains and window.
They are nomadic.
Opaque.
drapes
The curtains dragged heavily to the ground, the view from the glass obscured by a fog of neglect. (APEX)
Curtains.