That's a "funny" question.
htf
their grandmother
yes
Adjective a+
A possessive pronoun functions as an adjective when it modifies a noun, indicating ownership or relationship. For example, in the phrase "her book," "her" is a possessive pronoun acting as an adjective because it describes the noun "book." If the pronoun stands alone without a noun (e.g., "That book is hers"), it is functioning as a possessive pronoun, not as an adjective.
No, but 'reads' is a present verb. (e.g. He reads a book.)
an audio book
I'm pretty sure in the book she doesn't have a name.
In the sentence, "This book of jokes is very funny," the verb is "is."
Meggie reads the book instead because when Mo reads aloud, what's happening in the book turns into real life.
No
Because my dad ate a banana before he goes to sleep and reads a very funny book called Sticky stuffy or Sticky Things. I forgot. Anyway, for the answer of the question it's number thirty.
"That book is mine." ="It is my book."
book worm
125 minutes
The lector reads from a book called the Lectionary which the priest also reads the gospel from. The book of prayers the priest reads from at the altar and chair is called the Roman Missal, or Sacramentary.
There are no adjectives or adverbs. The word 'a' is an article, not actually an adjective. The sentence "I have recently written a biographical book", for example, would have the adverb 'recently' (when was it written) and the adjective 'biographical' (what kind of book).