Neighbor can act as a noun and as an adjective.
Example (adjective): The neighbor units are labeled with "adjacent".
The clause begins with a relative pronoun (that) so it is an adjective clause.Adverb clauses begin with a subordinating conjunction and answer how, when, or why, as adverbs do.E.g. In the sentence "The corn that your neighbor raises", "that your neighbor raises" describes "corn" which is a noun so "that your neighbor raises" is an adjective phrase.
"that your neighbor raises" is the subordinate clause. mykel howard
Adjective
A predicate nominative is the noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject.A predicate adjective is the adjective following a linking verb which modifies (describes) the subject of the sentence.The word 'kind' is both a noun and an adjective and will function as either a predicate nominative or a predicate adjective. Examples:This brand is the kind that mom likes. (the noun 'kind' restates the subject noun 'brand')My neighbor was so kind during my recuperation. (the adjective 'kind' describes the subject noun 'neighbor')
A relative pronoun introduces an adjective clause. An adjective clause is a group of words with a subject and a verb (but not a complete sentence) that gives information its antecedent. A relative clause is also called an adjective clause because it 'describes' the antecedent.The relative pronouns are: who, whom, whose, which, that.Examples:Mr. Green is the neighbor who fixed my bicycle. (describes neighbor)The flowers that I like best are the tulips. (describes flowers)The man whose car I hit was very nice about it. (describes man)
It depends on the usage:The past participle of 'to neighbor' is neighboring, used as an adjective to mean adjacent or nearby.The adjective meaning 'done as a friendly neighbor would' is neighborly.
Neighborly
The clause begins with a relative pronoun (that) so it is an adjective clause.Adverb clauses begin with a subordinating conjunction and answer how, when, or why, as adverbs do.E.g. In the sentence "The corn that your neighbor raises", "that your neighbor raises" describes "corn" which is a noun so "that your neighbor raises" is an adjective phrase.
"Neighboring" is an adjective. It describes something that is situated close to or next to something else.
No, neighbor is a noun. The word neighborly is an adjective, and there is no adverb form.
"that your neighbor raises" is the subordinate clause. mykel howard
Adjective
We = subject should show = predicate generosity - direct object to = preposition our = possessive adjective neighbor = object of the preposition
Prossimo means "near" or "next" as an adjective. As a noun it means "neighbor."
Neighboring means adjacent to, bordering, or nearby. It is the present participle of the verb "to neighbor" (to border, to be next to), and is used as a verb or an adjective, and more rarely a noun. The noun "neighbor" (UK neighbour) is a person, place, or thing that is near to another.
A predicate nominative is the noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject.A predicate adjective is the adjective following a linking verb which modifies (describes) the subject of the sentence.The word 'kind' is both a noun and an adjective and will function as either a predicate nominative or a predicate adjective. Examples:This brand is the kind that mom likes. (the noun 'kind' restates the subject noun 'brand')My neighbor was so kind during my recuperation. (the adjective 'kind' describes the subject noun 'neighbor')
The word cranky is not a noun; cranky is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (a cranky neighbor, a crankyteacher).The abstract noun form for the adjective cranky is crankiness.