There is no adjective in that sentence.
State can be a noun or a verb. In this sentence it is a verb: State your name, please. In this sentence it is a noun: What state do you live in?
Please have patience is the correct sentence.
No, the word please is either a verb or an interjection. There is an adjective form (pleased) taken from the past participle of the verb "to please" (satisfy or make happy).
No, the word her is a personal objective pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun as the object of a sentence or phrase; or an adjective, a word that describes a noun. Examples:Pronoun: Please give her change to her.Adjective: Please give her change to her.
Pleasurable
Isn't Mozart a wonderful composer of classical music?Hansel and Gretel is a classical example of the work of the brothers Grimm.Spanish guitar differs from classical guitar, but they sound the same to me.
An adjective describes a noun. For example, in the sentence, "I would like that green lollipop, please," "green" is the adjective describing "lollipop."
No.The sentence in the question should be - Pass me the pen please - but there is no adjective in this sentence.Pass me the red pen please - red is an adjective.The is never an adjective it is always an article. There are three articles a/an/the. Articles come before nouns.Pass me the pen please. - because the is used in this sentence we assume the people talking know which pen - one particular pen - they are talking about.Pass me a pen please - in this sentence a pen means any pen no particular pen.Pass me an orange please - use an when the noun after a/an/the starts with a vowel.
Yes. Example sentence: Please open the front door. Front is an adjective describing door.
The adjective in the sentence is "dust." It describes the action of lifting the books, suggesting that the books need to be lifted for the purpose of dusting.
The adjective form of please is pleasant.
State can be a noun or a verb. In this sentence it is a verb: State your name, please. In this sentence it is a noun: What state do you live in?
Poor (adjective) is used incorrectly. It should be pour (verb).
Please have patience is the correct sentence.
No, the word please is either a verb or an interjection. There is an adjective form (pleased) taken from the past participle of the verb "to please" (satisfy or make happy).
No, the word her is a personal objective pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun as the object of a sentence or phrase; or an adjective, a word that describes a noun. Examples:Pronoun: Please give her change to her.Adjective: Please give her change to her.
That sentence makes no sense, but, "Give you that disk, please."