The word talking (present participle of to talk) can be an adjective (talking neighbors, talking points).
Adverbs that can modify the verb talking include slowly, quickly, fast, slow, quietly, loudly, nastily.
The noun (gerund) talking can be preceded by adjectives: slow, fast, quiet, loud, more, less.
The prepositional phrase "in the study hall procedures" is usually an adverbial rather than an adjective phrase, because the substance of the phrase is a description of "where" something is. Example as an adverbial phrase: "A rule against loud talking can be found in the study hall procedures." A possible example as an adjective phrase: "A rule in the study hall procedures forbids loud talking."
it is an adjective!
Adjective.
It depends on how you use it. If you are talking about something that is sharp, like a knife or a note, then it is an adjective. If you are talking about a sharp, a type of note or needle, then it is a noun. A good way to tell the difference is whether you can substitute another adjective, like a color, and have it make sense. A knife can be red, blue, dull, or sharp. WIth the sentence "This is a sharp knife" you can substitute a lot of adjectives and have it still make sense. However, if you are in music class and telling someone "This is a sharp, and this is a flat," it isn't going to make sense if you say "this is a blue," or "this is a green," or "this is a dull." If you can't substitute another adjective, then it likely isn't one. :)
The usual adjective is intrusive. The present participle intruding can also be an adjective.
baseball is a noun. If you are talking about baseball as describing it, it is an adjective.
He can only be an adjective when you are talking about a he or something that belongs to he. he is a pronoun and nothing else
The noun talk is not an adjective, but technically a noun adjunct, when used in phrases such as "talk show." 'The talking dog stunned the world with its talent' would be an example of the participle talking used as an adjective.
If you're talking about adjective, like in parts of speech, then the word 'right' is the adjective, describing the noun 'triangle'.
If you're talking about the adjective, tight. If you're talking about the way a person acts, unchaste.
yes, if you are talking about like boyfriend girlfriend tpe of couple. If you are talking like a couple of apples, then no.
That depends on if you are talking about the noun or the adjective. The noun does not have an antonym. The adjective, however, does have an antonym and it is elective, optional, or voluntary.
The word killed can be an adjective, particularly when talking about an animal that is freshly killed. Killed can also be the past tense of the verb kill.
Well this would depend on what type of adjective phrase you are talking about. There are three different types of adjective phrases:Head-final adjective phrase - This contains an adverb and then an adjectiveHead-initial adjective phrase - This contains an adjective followed by a preposition and a noun.Head-medial adjective phrase - This contains an adverb followed by an adjective, preposition, and then a noun
The word is likely one of these:disgusting - (adjective) repulsive, repellentdiscussing - conversing, talking
Scanned *can* be an adjective... if you are talking about a "scanned document" for instance. But if you say "She scanned the room for her friend," you are using it as a verb.
If you are talking about the word 'praised' as an adjective, there are no antonyms. If you are talking about it as a verb in past tense, some antonyms would include 'blame' and 'criticize'.