Yes. Adjectives are describing words. In the sentence "That is a tall building," the word tall is describing the height of the building.
Adjective. Superlative adjective to be more specific.
Yes, the noun 'tall' is a word for a clothing size.The adjective 'tall' describes a noun as having greater than ordinary height; having a specified height.A predicate noun is a noun following a linking verb that renames the subject.Example: These jeans are a tall, I wear a medium.A predicate adjective is an adjective following a linking verb that describes the subject.Example: Your brothers are really tall.A predicate noun and a predicate adjective are both subject complements.
yes
No, an adjective is a describing word such as stupid, funny, or tall.
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'tall' is tallness.
'Tall' would be the adjective.
Adjective. Superlative adjective to be more specific.
The word tall *is* an adjective. The comparative and superlative are taller and tallest.
No. Tall is an adjective.
Yes, the noun 'tall' is a word for a clothing size.The adjective 'tall' describes a noun as having greater than ordinary height; having a specified height.A predicate noun is a noun following a linking verb that renames the subject.Example: These jeans are a tall, I wear a medium.A predicate adjective is an adjective following a linking verb that describes the subject.Example: Your brothers are really tall.A predicate noun and a predicate adjective are both subject complements.
The word "it" is not an adjective (it is a pronoun). A word is an adjective if it modifies (defines, characterizes) a noun or pronoun. The big tent - big is an adjective He is tall - tall is an adjective This key - this (while arguably called a determiner) is a demonstrative adjective
tall
Taller is an adjective. It is the comparative form of tall, meaning "more tall." The superlative form is tallest.
no, its an action verb. climbing a TALL ladder, tall would be the adjective, climbing is the action verb
yes
yes
tall