you can use enjoyable, peaceful, pleasing and more for vacation
No, it is a noun. A vacation is a time off from work or school, or the leisure activities done in that time.
spot is the subject while vacation is the adjective.
Just can be used as an adjective to mean fair and as an adverb to mean exactly. The court made a just decision. (adjective) This is just the vacation I needed. (adverb)
The word 'memorable' is an adjective, not a noun.The adjective memorable describes a noun as worth remembering. Example: Our vacation in Rio was a memorable experience.
The nouns in the sentence are:mother's, a possessive noun (the partner of my mother);business, an attributive noun; a noun used as an adjective to describe the noun 'partner';partner, the subject of the sentence;vacation, the object of the preposition 'on'.Note: The word 'week' is a noun but it is part of the compound, complex adjective 'two-week' used to describe the noun 'vacation'.
Nouns: vacation, statesverb: droveAdjective: summerAdverb: through*Note: the word twelve is often called a determiner when used in combination with the noun states, but other sources consider it an adjective.
The word fine is an adjective describing the noun time.The pronoun your is a possessive adjective with describes the noun vacation.
spot is the subject while vacation is the adjective.
Just can be used as an adjective to mean fair and as an adverb to mean exactly. The court made a just decision. (adjective) This is just the vacation I needed. (adverb)
No. the word they've is a contraction of the personal pronoun 'they' and the verb 'have'. The contraction they've functions as the subject and the verb (or auxiliary verb) in a sentence or clause.Examples:They have gone on vacation.Or,They've gone on vacation.An adjective is a word used to describe a noun.Example:They had a nice vacation. (the adjective 'nice' describes the noun 'vacation')
The word getaway can be a noun and an adjective. The noun form is both a means of escape and a vacation. The adjective form is the plans for an escape.
Yearly can be used as both an adjective and an adverb. When it modifies a noun, it's an adjective. "It's time for our yearly vacation!" When it modifies a verb, it's an adverb. "We travel yearly."
The word 'memorable' is an adjective, not a noun.The adjective memorable describes a noun as worth remembering. Example: Our vacation in Rio was a memorable experience.
The word beneficiary is a noun but is also used as an adjective. Examples: Noun: You are listed as the beneficiary on your Aunt Alice's life insurance. Adjective: The beneficiary result of saving your money is that you can afford that vacation.
The nouns in the sentence are:mother's, a possessive noun (the partner of my mother);business, an attributive noun; a noun used as an adjective to describe the noun 'partner';partner, the subject of the sentence;vacation, the object of the preposition 'on'.Note: The word 'week' is a noun but it is part of the compound, complex adjective 'two-week' used to describe the noun 'vacation'.
Welcomed is a verb (past tense of welcome) and an adjective (a welcomed vacation).
Nouns: vacation, statesverb: droveAdjective: summerAdverb: through*Note: the word twelve is often called a determiner when used in combination with the noun states, but other sources consider it an adjective.
"Vacanza toscana" is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Tuscan vacation."Specifically, the feminine noun "vacanza" means "vacation." The feminine adjective "toscana" means "Tuscan." The pronunciation is "vah-KAHN-tsah toh-SKAH-nah."