Predicate: "is"
Adjective: "oldest"
Noun: "dancing"
She was dancing in her room.
Irish is the proper adjective for Irish, as in "Irish dancing," "Irish jig," or "Irish bar."
Yes!
The word dancing is the present participle of the verb to dance. The present participle of a verb (an -ing word) is also an adjective and a verbal noun called a gerund. Example sentences:Verb: I'll be dancing at your wedding.Adjective: I've worn out my dancing shoes.Noun: I've signed up for dancing as my extra curricular activity.
They loved dancing so they did the fandango when they were in Spain.
"Uninhibited" is an adjective. The following sentence illustrates its use:Her spontaneous and uninhibited dancing captured my attention.
She was dancing in her room.
"Raucous" is an adjective describing the type of dancing being done.
Irish is the proper adjective for Irish, as in "Irish dancing," "Irish jig," or "Irish bar."
has, sparked and dancing
Dancing is the main verb, the complete verb phrase is 'are dancing'
Yes!
Depends.In the sentence "The dancing monkey is cute." it is an adjective used to describe the monkey. Which monkey? The dancingmonkey.But in the sentence "I am dancing." It is a verb.
The word dancing is the present participle of the verb to dance. The present participle of a verb (an -ing word) is also an adjective and a verbal noun called a gerund. Example sentences:Verb: I'll be dancing at your wedding.Adjective: I've worn out my dancing shoes.Noun: I've signed up for dancing as my extra curricular activity.
The present participle of the verb to dance is dancing.The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective and a gerund (a verbal noun).Examples:I'll be dancing at your wedding. (verb)I've worn out my dancing shoes. (adjective)I've signed up for dancing as my extra curricular activity. (noun)
I would place it as an adjective before the word music (such as "heavy metal music); or as a parentheses (such as...we were listening to music (oldies but goodies) all night; or as a noun (The music we listened to was 60's rock); or an adverb (Square dancing), or as a object of a prepositional phrase (I got tired of listenining to the classics); or as the object (Music has never been better than 60's rock); the predicate noun (SIxties rock is the best music there ever was.) or really, I dont know of any way it cannot be incorporated into a sentence.
He is singing and she is dancing.