adverb
normally closed but if u dont want to lock your self out then leave it open
9
After a fire, the owl easily finds food in open areas.
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.
From what I have found, double leaf doors seem to be when a door is made up of two vertical panels which can both open/close. Please visit the link to see what I mean; http://www.silvelox.co.uk/gallery-double-leaf-doors.html
adjective
No. Open is an adjective, and openly is an adverb.
Wide can be used as both an adjective and an adverb.Adjective: a wide turnAdverb: open wide
It can be a verb or an adjective. As a verb: Can you OPEN this container? As an adjective: The library is OPEN till 8:00.
Yes, the word electronically is an adverb.
Both free and freely are adverb forms of the adjective free. Free as an adverb means "loose" or "open" (e.g. to cut free, to run free) Freely means done in a free or open fashion (e.g. flow freely)
Yes, wide is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as more than average width; for example a wide shoe or a widerefrigerator.The word wide is also an adverb, a word that modifies a verb; for example 'Open wide.'
It is only an adjective, an adverb or a noun
Doors Open was created in 2008.
It depends on what you are trying to say. For example, look at this sentence: "The doors, which open onto the terrace, are made of oak." If you take out the part between the commas, the statement is still true (a nonrestrictive clause). In this case, you should use "which".On the other hand, if throwing out the clause (or extra information - in the example above, it is "open onto the terrace") would change the meaning of the sentence, you need a "that".For example, "the doors that are on the right side of the street are all red."Here, the "extra information" is "are on the right side of the street". If you took this out, you'd be saying that all of the doors are all red.Grammar Girl has some great quick tips on this subject, if you'd like to dig deeper.
Possibly. Sickly is an adjective when used to mean in ill health (e.g. he was a sickly child) and may be seen as either an adjective or adverb when modifying a color (adjective) to mean ugly or repugnant (e.g. a sickly green hue). The open question is whether the word hue or green is being modified.But sickly is an adverb, used preferentially over sickily, to mean in a manner indicating sickness.(e.g. he coughed sickly).
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