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What tells more about another word?

An adjective tells more about a noun eg a red book. Redis an adjective and book a noun. An adverb tells more about a verb eg He ran home quickly. Ran is a verb and quickly an adverb.


What besides an adjective tells more about another noun?

Sometimes a noun is used as an adjective to describe a noun. Some examples are:a spring bouqueta January thawa stair runnera car windowa steel frame


Does an adverb tell more about another noun?

The main job of an adverb is to modify a verb. An adverb can also modify and adjective, which is a word that 'tells more about a noun'. So, by modifying an adjective, an adverb is telling you more about the noun. Examples:a really hot dayfreshly laundered sheetsa broadly worded question


What tells more about a noun when peferring to parts of speech?

Adjectives modify nouns.


Is 'from' a verb or noun?

It is neither. The word 'from' is a preposition. Example:We have a question from an interested student.The preposition 'from' introduces the prepositional phrase 'from an interested student'; a prepositional phrase tells something more about a noun in the sentence. In this sentence, the prepositional phrase tells more about the noun question (the origin of the question).


How is an adverb similar to an adjctive?

adverb tells us something more about verb & adjective tells us something more about the noun or pronoun. through this aspect these are similar.


A noun or pronoun that follows and renames another noun or pronoun is called a?

an appositive


What is another way to say proper noun?

well there is a another way it is in Greek and its called paran sounds weird but really is called that


Is attic a common noun?

No, "attic" is a noun. If it is used with another noun (e.g. attic fan) it is called a noun adjunct.


What is a object of a preposition for mesa?

A preposition is a word most often preceding a noun or a pronoun that expresses a relationship to another word or phrase in a sentence. The preposition and the noun or pronoun modified by the preposition is called a prepositional phrase.Example of prepositions used with the noun mesaare:We drove to the mesa. (the preposition 'to' tells where we drove)They stood on the mesa. (the preposition 'on' tells where they stood)I picked up a rock from the mesa. (the preposition 'from' tells where the rock was picked up)Some eagles nested above the mesa. (the preposition 'above' tells where the eagles nested)We took photos of the mesa. (the preposition 'of' tells what the subject of the photos was)


Is it correct hounds pack?

The noun phrase "hounds pack" is technically correct, the plural noun "hounds" describes the noun "pack". A noun used to describe another noun is called an attributive noun (or noun adjunct).A more common way to express the noun phrase is to use the noun "pack" as a collective noun: a pack of hounds.


What is the part of speech for the word map title?

The word 'title' is a noun, modified by the noun 'map'. A noun used to describe another noun is called an attributive noun. Example: The map title is important because it tells you what you are looking at. The word 'map' is also a verb: map, maps, mapping, mapped. The word 'title' is also a verb: title, titles, titling, titled.