No, puddles is not an adjective. Puddles is a noun (plural form of puddle; a thing) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of puddle; an action).
Noun: Some children enjoy jumping in puddles.
Verb: Water puddles around the door when it rains.
A pool of crimson.
Example: "She was caught running with scissors."The preposition, with, is an objective preposition.Why?Because the verb running has an object, with scissors. The object of a verb is something the verb acts on, or points to. The preposition with is part of the object in the above example.Another example: "They took turns stepping in puddles on the way home."In this example, in is the objective preposition, because it links puddles with the verb stepping. Where did they step? They stepped in puddles.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective is clumsy.
they live in puddles and they drink the puddles and they eat the mud in the puddles :)
The cast of Love Puddles - 2011 includes: Mikey McParlane as King Puddles
it condensed into a gas
The duration of I Can Jump Puddles is 2880.0 seconds.
The nouns are garbage and puddles.
I Can Jump Puddles was created on 1981-06-07.
yh i was surrouned by puddlesYou could say for example: There were many puddles on the footpath.Or maybe: The puddles splashed everywhere
no, puddles are not bad for your car, just make sure Mr. Carl isn't with them. they're usually not harmless, unless you do the harm to light puddles, the ugly puddles. so bring all of them on your trip
I stepped in a big puddle on the sidewalk.
"in the mud puddles" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence. It consists of the preposition "in" and its object "mud puddles".
the water in the puddles had turned into frozen water, or ice
Jumping Puddles - 2011 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G