No, it is not. The word photo is a noun, a short form of the noun photograph.
Since photo is not used as a verb, it has no participle adjectives. Used with other nouns (photo finishing, photo album), it is a noun adjunct.
The adjective in this sentence is "a," which is an indefinite article.
photographphotographyphotocopyphotoelectricphotogenicphotosynthesis
The word 'photographic' is the adjective form of the noun photograph.Another word for photograph is the noun photo.
Yes, burnt is the past participle of the verb to burn (burns, burning, burned or burnt), which is also an adjective form. Example sentence:She pulled a burnt photo of her family from the debris left from the fire.
The word photograph is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a picture of something that you make with a camera (often shortened to photo), a word for a thing.The word photograph is also a verb: photograph, photographs, photographing, photographed.The noun forms of the verb to photograph are photographer, photography, and the gerund, photographing.
The noun monochrome is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for an image (picture, painting, photo, etc) in shades of a single color. Some dictionaries designate the form monochrome as the adjective, some dictionaries designate the form monochromatic as the adjective.
The word universal is both an adjective and a noun. The noun universal is a word for an idea or feature that exists everywhere. Example: The use of cell phones is now universal. A friend sent me a photo that he took while in Africa of three men in a weathered wooden rowboat with a goat tied to the bow; one of the men was using a cell phone (a great photo). The noun form for the adjective universal is universalness.
A preposition connects its object (a noun or pronoun) to another word or group of words in the sentence. The phrase acts as a modifier, i.e. an adjective or adverb.Examples:The boy in the photo looks happy.(in the photo tells you which boy -adjective)We saw the dog in the yard.(in the yard is where you saw it - adverb)
No, the word 'wistfully' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The word 'wistfully' is the adverb form of the adjective 'wistful'.Examples:Mother wistfully turned the pages of the photo album. (modifies the verb 'turned')It's a wistfully humorous play. (modifies the adjective 'humorous')A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.The nouns in the example sentences are: mother, pages, album, play.
glamorous [ adjective person, clothes, photo, atmosphere glamour inv lifestyle destar restaurant, café chic occasion éclatantproduction somptueux job prestigieux
I like you photo : j'aime ta photo (that's) like your photo : (c'est) comme ta photo
Photo session