No. Floor is a noun because it is a thing/object.
No, polished is either the past tense of polish, or an adjective (the polished floor)
The word swept is the past participle, past tense of the verb to sweep (He swept the floor.), and an adjective, a word that describes a noun (The plane had a swept wing.). There is no plural form for a verb or an adjective. Nouns and pronouns have plural forms.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
Flat, even, level, are all synonyms for smooth.Smooth is an adjective. Smoothly is an adverb.She touched his smooth face. - adjective. (describes the noun face)They danced smoothly around the dance floor - adverb (gives more information about the verb dance)
No, the word 'faulty' is not a noun. The word 'faulty' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as defective or imperfect.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.Examples:The door to the faulty elevator had a caution sign on it. (adjective)There is a bank of elevators on the tenth floor. (collective noun)
wet suit, wet paint, wet floor.
Valley is a noun. But it is used as an 'adjunct' or adjective to describe things in or about a valley: valley floor, valley streams, valley residents.
No, polished is either the past tense of polish, or an adjective (the polished floor)
Piano in Italian is "even" as an adjective, "floor," "piano" or "plan" as a noun, "quiet" or "slow" as an adjective, and "quietly" or "slowly" as an adverb in Italian.
The elephant ate the ice cream off the cage floor at the zoo.
the prepositional phrase in that sentence is: 'of the bedroom'
There are three nouns and a pronoun. Bed, floor and tank are nouns, and it is a pronoun. The word its is a possessive pronoun used as an adjective.
The word 'hard' is an adjective (a hard floor, hard water) or an adverb (push hard, work hard), but not a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'hard' is hardness.
as an adjective: It is expedient that you go.as a noun: The ladder was a useful expedient for getting to the second floor.
A prepositional phrase acts as an adjective or adverb.As an adjective, the prepositional phrase will answer the question Which one?The shoe on the floor belongs to you.As an adverb, a prepositional phrase will answer questions such as How? When? Where?After class, John asked me on a date.
The participial in this sentence is "broken." It is a present participle that functions as an adjective modifying the noun "vase."
Mopped is a verb. It's the past tense of mop. Mopped can also be used as an adjective. Example: a mopped floor.