Loud, tall, entertaining, shy, boring, enthusiastic, superb, wonderful, pleasant. amusing, lively, merry, witty.
I hope this is enough.
The adjective for "inspire" is "inspirational." It describes something that motivates or encourages others, often by evoking positive feelings or ideas. For example, an inspirational speaker can uplift an audience and spark their creativity or ambition.
No, the word 'our' is a possessive adjective, a word that is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to the speaker and one or more other people. A possessive adjective is a type of pronoun.The possessive pronoun form is ours, a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to the speaker and one or more other people.Examples:Our house is on the corner. (possessive adjective, describes the noun 'house')The house on the corner is ours. (possessive pronoun, takes the place of the noun 'house')
There is nothing wrong with the comparative drier, but native speakers frequently use "more + adjective" instead of the comparatives. Sometimes a comparative will just sound strange to a speaker, who then replaces it with the "more + adjective" phrase. I use drier and driest without any hesitation.
Jocose is an adjective meaning playful or humourous."Patrick's jocose commentary kept me from being bored during the speaker's dull presentation."
An adjective describes a noun or pronoun, telling us about its characteristics, or its imputed - attributed, or credited - characteristics.For example:'A tenor voice' tells us the type (tenor: adjective) of voice (voice: noun) a particular singer has.'A lyric tenor' tells us the type (lyric: adjective) of tenor voice (tenor voice: noun) a singer has.'A famous lyric tenor' tells us the singer (lyric: adjective; tenor: noun) is well-known (famous: adjective).'A wonderful lyric tenor' tells us the singer (lyric: adjective; tenor: noun) is considered by the speaker be excellent, or admirable, (wonderful: adjective).
No, a noun only needs an adjective when the speaker wishes to describe the noun.
It is a possessive adjective. It is sometimes called an "absolute possessive adjective" because, unlike the "possessive adjective" my, it is not used before a noun.
"Guest speaker" is a noun phrase, consisting of an adjective (guest) and a noun (speaker); it is not a compound preposition.
Yes, but "guest" is usually a noun (a person), and more rarely a verb. It is considered an adjective (but is probably an adjunct) in guest towel, guest room, or guest speaker.
Articulate is a good word. "The statesman was a great speaker who articulated with charisma." Another option is eloquent. "The statesmen was a great and eloquent speaker"
No, the word 'my' is a possessive adjective, not a proper noun. It is used to indicate ownership or belonging to the speaker.
The adjective for "inspire" is "inspirational." It describes something that motivates or encourages others, often by evoking positive feelings or ideas. For example, an inspirational speaker can uplift an audience and spark their creativity or ambition.
No, the word 'our' is a possessive adjective, a word that is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to the speaker and one or more other people. A possessive adjective is a type of pronoun.The possessive pronoun form is ours, a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to the speaker and one or more other people.Examples:Our house is on the corner. (possessive adjective, describes the noun 'house')The house on the corner is ours. (possessive pronoun, takes the place of the noun 'house')
The word 'my' is first person, an adjective describing something belonging to the speaker. My is not ever used in the second person.
an"irregular adjective" is an adjective of relation that is not derivid from the same root as the correspounding noun (or is based on the same root but in a way that is non-intivitive even to a native english speaker.) these are also called collateral adjectives.
There is nothing wrong with the comparative drier, but native speakers frequently use "more + adjective" instead of the comparatives. Sometimes a comparative will just sound strange to a speaker, who then replaces it with the "more + adjective" phrase. I use drier and driest without any hesitation.
Jocose is an adjective meaning playful or humourous."Patrick's jocose commentary kept me from being bored during the speaker's dull presentation."