An adjective must agree with the noun it modifies in gender, number, and case. In languages with gender distinctions, the adjective must match the noun's gender (masculine, feminine, or neuter). Additionally, the adjective must be in the same number (singular or plural) as the noun, and it must reflect the appropriate grammatical case, which affects its form based on the noun's role in the sentence.
No, the word 'perforce' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as by force or circumstances.Example: My bills are in arrears so I must perforce find a second job.
A cumulative adjective is a type of adjective that modifies a noun by adding descriptive qualities in a sequence, where each adjective builds upon the meaning of the previous one. Unlike coordinate adjectives, which can be separated by "and" and have equal weight, cumulative adjectives are not interchangeable and must appear in a specific order. For example, in the phrase "a lovely old Italian painting," "lovely," "old," and "Italian" work together to provide a more comprehensive description of the painting.
2/3 must agree
Yes, Roman numerals is a compound noun, an open spaced compound noun; a word made up of the adjective 'Roman' and the noun 'numerals' to form a noun with its own meaning. The adjective 'Roman' is a proper adjective and must be capitalized.
A redundancy. Numbers are numeric by definition.
The adjective and noun agreement rule in Latin requires that a noun and any adjective that modifies must agree in gender, number, and case (but not necessarily ending).
If the word modifies a noun or pronoun, it is an adjective. For example:a RED cara BLUE birda FUNNY jokea LARGE monstera PRETTY babyIf the word modifies a verb, adjective, or adverb, it must be an adverb. For example:moving SLOWLYVERY largeALMOST completely
well for adjectives it must be a describing clause and for verb it must be a doing clause and for a adverb it must be a modifying clause
kikiubwaCORRECTION:The word is -kubwa, an adjective that must agree with the noun it modifies, e.g.":kiti kikubwa, big chairgari kubwa, big carmtoto mkubwa, big childvitu vikubwa, big thingswadudu wakubwa, big bugs
your in Swahili is "yako"It's actually -ako, an adjective that must agree with the noun it modifies, so:mtoto wako (your child), pete yako (your ring), mti wako (your tree), gari lako (your car), kiti chako (your chair), etc.
North can be a noun, an adjective, or an adverb depending on how it is used. Example of noun: Look to the north. The article adjective "the" signals that a noun is coming. Example of adjective: Moss usually grows on the north side of the tree. The word "north" modifies the word "side," which is a noun, so "north" must be an adjective. Example of adverb: The bird was flying north. The word "flying" is a verb and "north" modifies the verb, so "north" must be an adverb in this sentence.
An adjective in Spanish must agree in number (singular/plural) and gender with the noun that it describes.
A predicate adjective (also called a subject complement) modifies the subject like other descriptive adjectives, it must follow a linking verb in a sentence.Example subject-linking verb-predicate adjective: You are funny.
The adverb is always. It modifies the verb must.
It is proper grammar to say "one must play aggressively" because "aggressively" is the adverb form of the adjective "aggressive" which modifies the verb "play."
No, the word 'perforce' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as by force or circumstances.Example: My bills are in arrears so I must perforce find a second job.
The word 'free' is an adjective in English and in Latin. Latin gives feminine, masculine or neuter gender to its nouns. Adjectives must agree in gender with the nouns or pronouns that they modify. Therefore, the adjective 'free' takes three forms in the singular, and three forms in the plural. In the masculine, the adjective is liber in the singular, and liberi in the plural. In the feminine, it's libera in the singgular, and liberae in the plural. In the neuter, it's liberum in the singular, and libera in the plural.