its freezing cold!!!
it blows you and your papers away!!!!
cold.
The simple subject is "wind."
Wind and night are nouns. For the most part a noun is an object - something you can touch or feel. A noun can also be a name, and sometimes even an intangible object or feeling (e.g. love). This means in the sentence provided the nouns are 'wind' and 'night'. The wind is something you can feel. The night is also classified as an object (however large it may be). 'Cold' is an adjective - it describes the noun (the wind). 'Blew' is a verb - it tells us what the wind did.
Yes, the word 'winter' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective. Examples:Noun: It will soon be winter.Verb: We will winter on the Rivera.Adjective: The winter sports are my favorite.
Cold is a noun and an adjective. Noun: I have a cold. Adjective: Expect cold weather.
No, the word 'colder' is an adjective, the comparative form of the adjective cold (colder, coldest).The word 'cold' is both an adjective and a noun.The noun 'cold' is a word for a condition of low temperature; a word for a common viral infection which inflames the mucous membrane of the nose and throat; a word for a thing.The noun form of the adjective 'cold' is coldness.
The simple subject is "wind."
The adjective in the sentence "This is a cold day in March" is "cold".
coffee noun was verb cold adjective
It is too cold to go swimming
Wind and night are nouns. For the most part a noun is an object - something you can touch or feel. A noun can also be a name, and sometimes even an intangible object or feeling (e.g. love). This means in the sentence provided the nouns are 'wind' and 'night'. The wind is something you can feel. The night is also classified as an object (however large it may be). 'Cold' is an adjective - it describes the noun (the wind). 'Blew' is a verb - it tells us what the wind did.
yes
yes, because you can have a sentence like 'it was a muggy, cold day outside'.
Type your answer here... cold, damp both are predicate adjectives
Snow fell across the ice cold tundra.
Cold is a noun and an adjective. Noun: I have a cold. Adjective: Expect cold weather.
The adverb 'too' in the context of this sentence is used to modify an adjective as 'to an extreme degree'. The adverb 'too' would be followed by an adjective, which in turn can be followed by a noun.Examples:The mountains were too high. (adjective)The mountains were too cold. (adjective)The mountains were too cold an environment for me. (noun)
There are three adjectives because an adjective describes a noun. Hot is an adjective because it describes sun, two is an adjective because it tells how many glasses you drank, and cold is an adjective because it describes water.