Yes, the word larger is the comparative form of the adjective large.
Yes a lot is an adjective
Do you know what an adjective is? have you skipped school? yes it is.
more, most
The word tall *is* an adjective. The comparative and superlative are taller and tallest.
Well its not slop, but slope and its adjective form is sloppy.
'larger' is an adjective. It describes the size or degree of something.
Larger is an adjective. It's the comparative form of large.
Perhaps she made the room seem larger.
No, it is a comparative adjective. (comparative form of the adjective large)A "proper adjective" is a capitalized form derived from a proper noun (e.g. French).
No, the word 'larger' is the comparative form of the adjective large (larger, largest). An adjective is a word used to describe a noun.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; for example:"Jack got a larger bicycle for his birthday. He gave his old bicycle to his smaller cousin."The pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'Jack' in the second sentence.The adjective 'larger' describes the noun 'bicycle'.
It can be, because the comparative for the adjective large (larger) is the same as for the adverb large (in a larger manner). E.g. Paint the company name larger on the door than on the window.
Yes, it is. It means of larger than nominal size (oversized load, oversized bed).
predicate adjective
predicate adjective
A complement is a noun, a pronoun, or an adjective (or a phrase which acts as a noun or adjective).There are two types of complements in English grammar:The subject complement, which can be a noun or an adjective, follows a linking verb and further defines the subject of the sentence.Examples:Mr. Jones is the mayor. (mayor is the subject complement, a noun)The boy became sleepy. (sleepy is the subject complement, an adjective)The object complement similarly tells something about the direct object of a non-linking verb, and follows the object.Examples:We elected Tom our chairman. (chairman refers to Tom, and is a noun)They made the school larger. (larger refers to school, and is an adjective)
No. If one is to say "something is getting larger", getting would be the verb, not larger. The root term large as a verb would be enlarge.No, it's a comparative adjective. Formed from the adjective large. To form comparative adjectives you add -ed to adjectives with one syllable or you use more for adjectives with two or more syllables.big - bigger, large - largerinteresting - more interesting, complicated - more complicated.Also you use than: larger than, more complicated thanTheir house is larger than ours.This test is more complicated than I thought.
No, it's a comparative adjective. Formed from the adjective large. To form comparative adjectives you add -ed to adjectives with one syllable or you use more for adjectives with two or more syllables.big - bigger, large - largerinteresting - more interesting, complicated - more complicated.Also you use than: larger than, more complicated thanTheir house is larger than ours.This test is more complicated than I thought.The verb is enlarge: He is enlarging his garden.