The word 'contract' is a noun and a verb.
A noun functioning as an adjective to describe another noun is called an attributive noun (or noun adjunct).
The adjective forms of the verb 'to contract' are contracting and contracted.
Examples:
We have a contract cleaner to clean the offices three times a week
The contract dispute was decided in a lawsuit.
We have a deadline for submitting the bid to the contracting agency.
I can recommend our contracted landscaper.
Here I am using it as a Direct Object- I gave the contract to the worker
There are 12 contracts on the brick home.
John is a contract professional.
Complete sentences are a sentence with a complete thought, statement, etc. Ex: He says he will help me on my homework. (this is a complete sentence) An incomplete sentence would be: He says he. (you did not complete the thought.)
Mezaire always followed a set schedule.
Shireen is definitely a thinker, a scholar and an intellectual.
No, it is just an adjective, so in the middle of a sentence, you'd just write kosher in lower case.
A verb is the active part of the sentence, and tells what is being done or what characteristic is observed. A noun is a name word, and may be the subject of a sentence, the object of a verb, or the object of a preposition. An adjective is a describing word, that tells something about a noun or pronoun; either identifying it or something. --- You can define each of the words in a sentence by its part of speech, and by the role it plays in the sentence. The boy kicked the red ball quickly. [the boy - complete subject] [kicked the red ball quickly - complete predicate] the - article (determiner) boy - noun - simple subject kicked - verb - simple predicate the - article red - adjective, modifies ball ball - noun - direct object quickly - adverb, modifies hit a. verb : kicked b. noun: boy, ball c. adjective: red
Subconcious is an adjective.
No, the correct way to write the sentence would be: "That happens because I did not read the complete sentence."
You can't write a sentence that is not a sentence, it is either a sentence or it is not. You can write a sentence that doesn't look like a sentence. For example, "Stop!"; although one word, it is a complete sentence. The subject 'you' is implied, the verb is 'stop', which makes it a complete sentence.
It's both. In the sentence "My initial reaction was horror", it is an adjective; in the sentence "Write your initial in the box", it is a noun.
pioneering
adjective - Many plants have compound leaves.noun - The prisoners have one hour in the compoundeveryday.verb - Arguing will just compound the problem.
governments have been in critcal circumstances
Adjective Sex is a taboo subject for many people
The complete meal had only 750 calories.
Duahh soo easy KHDUDCM
A complete sentence typically includes a subject (who or what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what the subject is doing or what is being done to the subject). It must also express a complete thought. An example would be: "The cat (subject) sat on the mat (predicate)."
Surface tension allows leaves to float.