No, adjectives can be used to describe nouns, pronouns, and noun phrases.
Nouns are not describing words. The word triangle is a noun. Adjectives are used to describe noun. Some adjectives that describe a triangle are:equilateralscaleneisoscelesacuteobtuse
Yes, in English adjectives usually come just before the noun they describe.However, this is not always true, especially in creative writing, e.g. "the house came into view, dark and desolate in the dim light of dusk," where some of the adjectives are in a following clause (the words 'and it was' are omitted).
The words 'path', 'computer', and 'bicycle' are nouns. The words to describe nouns are adjectives. Examples:a long patha new computera broken bicycleAnother type of word used to describe nouns are other nouns. Nouns used as adjectives are called an attributive nouns. Examples:a dirt pathan Apple computeran aluminum bicycle
Articles, adjectives, adverbs, nouns, and pronouns can be used to modify a noun.The articles are:DEFINITE ARTICLE: the (used to identify a specific noun)INDEFINITE ARTICLES: a (used before a noun starting with a consonant sound), an (used before a noun starting with a vowel sound)ADJECTIVES: An adjective describes or qualifies a noun (a big dog, a small dog); adjectives are used before the noun or after the verb (This is an easy subject. or This is hard.); two or more adjectives can be used together (a beautiful, young lady). There are hundreds of adjectives, some samples are: happy, sad, green, white, special, somber, chewy, dark, heavy, sweet, lucky, wonderful, etc.ADVERBS: An adverb, which is used to modify verbs, can also modify adjectives, which is additional information about a noun; for example a very happy birthday, his frequentlylong speeches, a simply delicious dish, etc.NOUNS used as adjectives (called attributive nouns), for example horse farm, almond cookies, circusclown, ranch dressing, etc.The modifying pronouns are:POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES, my, your, his, her, its, our, their.DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS, this, that, these, those, the former, etc.DISTRIBUTIVE PRONOUNS, each, either, none, neither, etc.NUMERAL PRONOUNS, some, any, few, many, none, all, etc.ADDITIONALLY: A predicate nominative or a predicate adjective restates a noun following a linking verb or the object of a verb, telling something about the noun.
You can't use adjectives as nouns; a noun is a word for a person place or thing, and adjectives are used to describe nouns. There is one word that is both a noun and an adjective that you could use for the noun chair: It is an antique or it is an antique chair.
The adjectives "these" and "those" should be used to specify or point out specific plural nouns. "These" is used for nouns that are close in distance or time, while "those" is used for nouns that are farther away in distance or time.
No. Adjectives are normally undeclinable. They may take a plural form only when used as nouns, as in the sentence: The reds outnumber the blues.
No. Only adjectives modify nouns and pronouns.Some words, such as fast, most, and clean, can be either an adjective or an adverb, depending on how they are used. If they refer to nouns, they are being used as adjectives.
when this and that are used to modify nouns they are treated as which part of speech
"An" is the indefinite article used before singular nouns/adjectives beginning with vowels. "A" is the indefinite article used before singular nouns/adjectives beginning with consonants. A cookie A helmet A hot ticket An eagle An orang-u-tan An outrageous example.
Holidays are days, and days are nouns. So no, holidays can't be used as adjectives.
Words that modify nouns or pronouns are called adjectives. Adjectives are used to provide more information about the qualities or characteristics of the nouns or pronouns they describe.
Yes, both words are adjectives (words used to describe nouns).
In the English language, adjectives do not change their form when used with a plural noun. They will end with an 's' before a plural noun only if they end with an 's' before a singular noun. A large house. Large houses. The famous author. The famous authors.
Adjectives are used to describe nouns. Adverbs are used to describe verbs, adjectives and other adverbs.
Not all sentences require both nouns and adjectives. A sentence can be complete with just a subject (noun) and a verb. Adjectives are used to describe nouns and add more detail, but they are not always required for a sentence to be grammatically correct.
Nouns are not describing words. The word triangle is a noun. Adjectives are used to describe noun. Some adjectives that describe a triangle are:equilateralscaleneisoscelesacuteobtuse