quantitative adjectives also known as adjectives of quantity are concerned with the amount or quantity of something.
some examples are..........
the quantitative adjectives are many, five and few.
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Numbers are always adjectives.
Very dull is an adjective. (Dull is the adjective and very is an adverb.)
Very can be an adjective, or an adverb.It is an adverb in "She did it very quickly" It is an adjective in "At the very back of the shop"
very is an adverb (technically an adverb clause = adverb+adjective) in this sentence, excited is an adjective that's being modified by the word very.
A cardinal number, such as ten, or an ordinal number, such as first.
The word both can act as an adjective (both boys) when used with nouns. Although it may be considered a quantifier or determiner, it acts like an adjective, so there is no separate adjective form.Both is a pronoun when not used with nouns (both were expelled).
No, it is not a preposition. The word both is a pronoun, or adjective.
The Existential Quantifier, usually written as a back-to-front capital E indicates the existence of a thing of a certain sort satisfying certain conditions. The Universal Quantifier, usually written as an upside-down capital A, indicates that every thing of a certain sort satisfies those conditions.
Numbers are always adjectives.
Very dull is an adjective. (Dull is the adjective and very is an adverb.)
Not in modern usage. Plenty is usually a noun, and usually refers to an unspecified number, quantity, or value (plenty of people, plenty of time, plenty of food). *some sources classify "plenty" as a quantifier rather than a noun or adjective *historically the term "plenty" was also used to mean plentiful, which is an adjective
No, "fifty stars" is not an adverb. It is a noun phrase describing a specific quantity of stars. An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb by providing more information about how, when, or where something happens.
The word twice is a numeral Quantifier it's called an adverb in dictionaries because "adverb" is the traditional wastebasket category -- if you don't know what the hell it's doing there, call it an adverb.
The word very is an adverb.
Very is an adverb, and pleasant is an adjective.
It's a determiner, sometimes a quantifier.
Very can be an adjective, or an adverb.It is an adverb in "She did it very quickly" It is an adjective in "At the very back of the shop"