No
The compound adjective in the sentence "She ordered a ham sandwich in sourdough bread" is "sourdough." It describes the type of bread used for the sandwich, indicating that the bread is made through the sourdough fermentation process. While "ham" is also an adjective describing the sandwich, "sourdough" specifically combines with "bread" to form a compound adjective.
Sourdough is the name of a type of bread. Dough is a noun not an adjective. This would be a compound word and only one word is a description of the other. Sourdough can also be a single adjective because it describes the bread (noun) An exampe of a compound adjective would be something that helps to describe the same noun like a thirty-minute course. "Thirty-minute" as the adjectives and "course" as the noun. Thirty describes the amount and minute describes the time of the noun (course).
HH
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!
compound
The compound adjective in the sentence "She ordered a ham sandwich in sourdough bread" is "sourdough." It describes the type of bread used for the sandwich, indicating that the bread is made through the sourdough fermentation process. While "ham" is also an adjective describing the sandwich, "sourdough" specifically combines with "bread" to form a compound adjective.
sourdough. It is made up of two words sour and dough. In the sentence it describes the bread. Sourdough is a compound word. It can be an adjective but it isn't a compound adjective. The sentence isn't written correctly to indentify any compound adjectives . It should be "She ordered a sourdough-ham sandwich." Sourdough-ham would be the compound adjective.
Sourdough is the name of a type of bread. Dough is a noun not an adjective. This would be a compound word and only one word is a description of the other. Sourdough can also be a single adjective because it describes the bread (noun) An exampe of a compound adjective would be something that helps to describe the same noun like a thirty-minute course. "Thirty-minute" as the adjectives and "course" as the noun. Thirty describes the amount and minute describes the time of the noun (course).
Compound adjective is the proper spelling of this phrase.
Penny-pinching is a compound adjective for a miser. Another compound adjective is Scrooge-like.
Penny-pinching is a compound adjective for a miser. Another compound adjective is Scrooge-like.
HH
Compound adjectives are only compound before the noun.
The adjective 'beautiful' is not a compound word.
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!
compound
compound