When using an adjective to describe one thing, use the positive degree. (Wikipedia)
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Sure! An example of a sentence using a numerical adjective is: "She has three dogs and two cats." In this sentence, "three" and "two" are numerical adjectives that describe the quantity of dogs and cats, respectively.
Little is not itself a comparative. There are two types of comparative for little: If you are using little to describe size (as in "A little old lady"), then the comparative is littler (as in, "Her husband was even littler"); if you are using little to describe quantity (as in "I want a little more ice cream"), then the comparative is less (as in, "I want less ice cream than that!").
You can describe it using words or in graph form.
by using an article with an adjective as a noun
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"salty"
Use and adjective
A witch is often described as wicked.
In grammar, superlatives are used to compare three or more things or people, indicating the highest degree of a quality. They are typically formed by adding "-est" to an adjective (e.g., tallest, fastest) or by using the words "most" or "least" before the adjective (e.g., most beautiful, least expensive). Superlatives are used to show which person or thing has the highest or lowest degree of a particular quality.
No, it is not. "Candidate" is a noun. Adjectives are words that describe nouns. For example, we might describe a candidate using the adjectives 'eligible', 'potential' or 'feasible'.
Miserably....... and......... devistated....... and........ depressed, dunno,
the thing at the bottom of your leg
One compound adjective could be "cone-shaped" because of its close approximation of that typical volcanic shape. Another two-word adjective could be "near-symmetric."
To be an adjective, a word must modify (describe) a noun. "He wrote her a love poem." (Poem is a noun, and here, love describes what kind of poem he wrote.)
You append -ish, or -y to a noun in order to make a descriptive term, like using "plasticy" to describe a something.
The word "exciting" is an adjective and can be compared using three degrees: positive, comparative, and superlative. The positive degree is "exciting," the comparative degree is "more exciting," and the superlative degree is "most exciting." These forms allow for comparisons between different levels of excitement.