Number order adjectives are adjectives that indicate the quantity of nouns, typically specifying the number of items. They often appear before other descriptive adjectives in a sentence, following the general order of adjectives in English. For example, in the phrase "three large red balls," "three" is the number order adjective. This order helps clarify and organize the description of nouns in a clear and coherent manner.
The word 'sixteen', or any cardinal number is a noun or adjective.
Depending on how it is used a number can be either a verb or an adjective.
Yes, when it modifies a noun (e.g. seven days). As just a number, it is a noun.
Yes, it is considered an adjective if used with a noun (fifth place), and can also be a noun. It is the ordinal number (5th) for the cardinal number five (5).
Yes, amounting to eleven in number.
The word first *is* an adjective (number one in order, or primary) - e.g. his first car.Ordinal numbers such as first can also be nouns (e.g. a first, the first).
Either a noun or an adjective. Fundamentally, nine is an adjective of quantity, but it is also used as a noun to mean "nine distinct things."
Numerous is the adjective form of number.
No, order may be a verb, or a noun, with several disparate meanings. The past participle, ordered, can be used as an adjective.
Order is not an adjective. It's a noun, meaning a command. It's also a verb, meaning to command.
No.
Orderless
RA9163 would appear to be a catalogue number, not a word. It has no adjective.
no. is an abbreviation of number(from French nombre)
The number seventy can be a noun, or a pronoun. But it is often an adjective referring to a number of objects, things, or concepts.
The: article/adjective office: adjective copier: subject/noun is: linking verb frequently: adverb out: adjective of: preposition order: noun/ object of the preposition
An article is are the following words: an, a, and the. A numeric adjective is an adjective that shows the approximate number of something without explicitly stating the exact number. For example: few, couple, some, etc.