If it is a really big sandwich you could probably say it is enormous. That wouldn't tell you how it tastes or what is in it but it would tell you it is very large.
No, the word 'enormous' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (an enormous house, an enormous animal, etc.)A related abstract noun is enormity.
The base word of enormous is enormity. This word is an adjective. The adjective enormous, describes something as being big.
No, the word 'immense' is not a noun, it is adjective that describes a noun as a very great in size or amount, for example an immense sandwich or an immense lie.The abstract noun forms for the adjective immense are immenseness and immensity.
As far as I know enormous is an adjective
Sandwich is not an adjective. It is a noun and does not describe anything. "Sand" might be a word, but "wich" is not. Sandwich is actually named after The Duke of Sandwich, a place in England. Therefore, sandwich is neither compound nor an adjective.
No. It is the adjective form. To make an adjective an adverb, add "-ly" to the end. So "enormously" is an adverb, indicating how something was done.
more enormous, most enormous
The adjective would be enormous.
"Enormous" is an adjective.That stadium is enormous! Enormous describes the stadium.
sourdough. It is made up of two words sour and dough. In the sentence it describes the bread. Sourdough is a compound word. It can be an adjective but it isn't a compound adjective. The sentence isn't written correctly to indentify any compound adjectives . It should be "She ordered a sourdough-ham sandwich." Sourdough-ham would be the compound adjective.
Sandwich is a noun. It describes a thing.
it is a noun...