The adjective 'out of order' is where there is a noun being modified and a comma is inseted after the noun. EX: the man, grizzled and old (no second noun)
Example:
The baby alligators, small and weak, ride on their mommas head.
Organized can be used as a verb or an adjective. Verb: Zelma organized her CDs in alphabetical order. Adjective: She is an organized person.
The word 'chronological' is an adjective. Only verbs have tenses.
The adjective "last" can be classified as a descriptive adjective when it indicates the final item in a sequence or the most recent in time. It is often used to denote something that follows all others in order or occurrence, such as in "the last book" or "the last day." Additionally, it can also function as a limiting adjective when it emphasizes the finality or exclusivity of a noun.
Both, since the word Arabian, when put in an order of adjectives, could fit as an adjective and so do as a proper noun. So it's both.
root word for extraordinary is ordinary as the word extra only tell the quality of ordinary or is only a type of adjective to ordinary I don't really think the first one is right, but this one should be the correct answer: ord
No, order may be a verb, or a noun, with several disparate meanings. The past participle, ordered, can be used as an adjective.
Order is not an adjective. It's a noun, meaning a command. It's also a verb, meaning to command.
Orderless
The: article/adjective office: adjective copier: subject/noun is: linking verb frequently: adverb out: adjective of: preposition order: noun/ object of the preposition
Only if it is used as an adjective. EXAMPLES: The coat was made to order. It was a made-to-order coat.
The word order is a noun. However, it can also be a verb.
Organized can be used as a verb or an adjective. Verb: Zelma organized her CDs in alphabetical order. Adjective: She is an organized person.
The word 'order' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; the word 'sequential' is an adjective describing the noun order.
The Inevitable student was trying to avoid the money order.
The adjective form of "fifteen" is "fifteenth." It is used to describe something that is in the order of fifteen, such as the fifteenth day of the month or the fifteenth chapter of a book.
The word 'chronological' is an adjective. Only verbs have tenses.
The word first *is* an adjective (number one in order, or primary) - e.g. his first car.Ordinal numbers such as first can also be nouns (e.g. a first, the first).