No. "The" is one of the three articles (a, an and the), which are a type of 'determiner' rather than an adjective. The word "grotesque" is the adjective.
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Randy's disfigured body was grotesque.
She had never been so frightened before.Mummy, James frightened me again.
during appears to be a adverb It's neither, it's a preposition. i believe it is a adverb
He was frightened badly. So I talked him down.
(grotesque is usually used to describe strange shapes or bizarre forms)"The statues had been carved to represent evil spirits and had the most grotesque faces, complete with horns and bulging eyes""Gargoyles are intentionally grotesque, perhaps in an effort to dispel evil spirits.""Among the more grotesque exhibits in the circus was the man with four eyes."
Grotesque is an adjective meaning ugly, disgusting or terrible.Medusa was truly grotesque; to look at her meant a certain death.The smell was grotesque in the sewer, but they trudged on regardless.
here is an example of a sentence using the word grotesque: "the masks in the Halloween store were awfully grotesque".
The grotesque mask startled her.Grotesque gargoyles perched on the roof of the building. The zombie was a grotesque parody of life.
Randy's disfigured body was grotesque.
The grotesque sculptures seemed at odds with the rest of the old church.
The victims body was found lying on the floor grotesque
It is a sentence.
The crime scene was grotesque.The grotesque features of the monster paralysed her with fear.
The scene of the crime was a grotesque and bloody site. The Phantom of the Opera's grotesque appearance originally shocked Christine. Early sideshows featured people with strange and often grotesque abnormalities.
Sometimes, safety films have grotesque examples of the consequences involved. A gargoyle is a grotesque creature with a hidden purpose.
The man was frightened to see that his son had killed himself!
She had never been so frightened before.Mummy, James frightened me again.