Bought is a verb. An adjective describes something. A verb is an action, or what you are doing. For example "I bought a new computer." The action is you buying the computer(bought). And the adjective would be "new" because it describes the computer.
The complete adjective clause is "that bought me a soda".
In the sentence, "Doris bought her mother a box of chocolates.", the adjective phrase is A, 'her mother'.
The direct object = shoesSubject = Harveyverb = boughtnew = adjective describing shoesyesterday = adverb modifying bought
Yes, 'bought' is a past tense verb. "I bought the bread." Therefore, the bread is receiving the action of the verb, 'bought', as the direct object of the sentence. 'I' is the subject, performing the action, 'bought.' "The bought bread tasted good." This is a different way of phrasing "The bread was bought, and it tasted good. This shows that the sentence has a compound verb, and bought is not an adjective. Don't be fooled!
The word bought is a verb; the past participle, past tense of the verb to buy (buys, buying, bought).I bought a cake for the party.The past participle of a verb is also an adjective, a word to describe a noun.I didn't make the cake, it's a bought cake.
No, the word "bought" is not an adverb.the word "bought" is a verb ("I bought some new shoes"). Sometimes it can also be an adjective, particularly in the United States ("this pie is store-bought").
The complete adjective clause is "that bought me a soda".
Bought
Tremendous is an adjective. They bought a tremendoushouse with their lottery winnings.
Expensive is an adjective. It describes a noun. Example: They bought an expensive car.
In the sentence, "Doris bought her mother a box of chocolates.", the adjective phrase is A, 'her mother'.
No, it is not. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to purchase. It can be a verb form, a participial, or an adjective (bought, paid for).
NEW and THAT are adjectives.
The surgeon bought a beautiful new house. The - article surgeon - noun bought - verb a - article beautiful - adjective new - adjective house - noun (direct object) http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/GRAMMAR/definitions.htm
Yes. Example: He bought a fast car. Fast is an adjective describing car.
No, the word 'largest' is an adjective; the superlative form for the adjective large:largelargerlargestExample: We bought the largest melon we could find.
No, heaviest is an adjective, the superlative form for the adjective heavy (heavier, heaviest). Example sentence:We bought the heaviest watermelon we could find.