"Midnight" is the noun in the phrase "midnight dreary." "Dreary" is the adjective that is describing "midnight."
In the English language, the adjective usually comes before the noun, however; the phrase "midnight dreary" comes from Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The Raven," in which Poe places "dreary" after "midnight" in order to set up the rhyme with "weary" that follows: "Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary...." The inverted syntax is also indicative of the time period in which Poe was writing.
Yes, dreary is an adjective--a dreary day.
The word dreary is an adjective. It means gloomy, dull, or sorrowful. There is a rarely seen related adjective, drearisome.
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'dreary' is dreariness.
The cast of A Midnight Dreary - 2011 includes: Kris Lundberg as Lenore Frances Moti Margolin as Allan Roderick Richie Wilson as Eddie
CBS Library - 1979 Once Upon a Midnight Dreary - 1.1 was released on: USA:21 October 1979
CBS Library - 1979 Once Upon a Midnight Dreary 1-1 was released on: USA: 21 October 1979
The cast of Once Upon a Midnight Dreary II - 2006 includes: Sylvia Kovacs as Jen Karl Peterson as Ted Nella Vinci as Vanessa
ona a midnight dreary, on a bleak december, in his house(office)
Midnight is 12:00. In this sentence, Midnight is a noun.That color is midnight blue. In this sentence, midnight is an adjective.Wait until midnight. NounWait 'til the midnight hour. Adjective
The only way to truly doesn't afraid is upon a midnight dreary I wandered that which are we too?
"Once upon a midnight dreary" uses anastrophe, which inverts the more common 'dreary midnight' to rhyme with weary at the end of the line. It is also a play on the common fairy tale opening of: "Once upon a time" to set a tone for the poem.
The nouns in the example verse are:midnightvolumelorenappingtapping