Kim's mom had a grave expression on her face when she saw her terrible report card.
there is no adjective in this sentence, an adjective describes a noun
Gravely is an adverb.
"The weather is just ducky" uses the adjective form, but "duckier" and "duckiest" are also adjective forms of "duck".
The only adjective in that sentence is "main"
An adjective clause is a group of words that acts as an adjective in a sentence. It typically starts with a relative pronoun, such as "who," "which," or "that."
Subconcious is an adjective.
They are about to exhume the casket from the grave.
Grave robbers like to steal goods in Egyptian tombs.
Grave is a noun or an adjective not a verb
ewan
pioneering
That black horse is running fast.
Grave can be an adjective (meaning serious or sombre) or an noun (meaning a burial place).The grave was unmarked, but flowers had still been laid there as long as the groundsman could remember.It certainly is a grave situation we have found ourselves in.He glanced at me with a grave look. 'We better get going' he said.
In modern English, grave is not normally used as a verb, but can be a noun, a noun adjunct (grave marker), or an adjective meaning serious.The transitive verb grave is identical to engrave. But this is nearly an archaic usage. It has an old nautical use meaning to clean and coat a wooden hull with pitch.Examples:"It takes time to grave (engrave) a tombstone.""In the drydock, the workers began to grave the keel of the old French ship."
When one is used before a noun, it is an adjective.Examples:This is one sentence with the adjective form.This is one example of using the word.
sonia Ghandhi
It can be, such as in the sentence, "I took out the cookies using an oven mitt."