your....
There are two pronouns in the sentence: who and his.The pronoun 'who' is an interrogative pronoun, a word used to introduce a question.The pronoun 'his' is a possessive adjective, a word used to describe the noun phrase 'last dollar'.
The adjective that modifies "kittens" in this sentence is "starving."
Yes, your example use of the demonstrative pronoun 'that', the adjective 'blue', the possessive adjective 'my', and the adjective 'last' are used to indicate a specific dress and a specific holiday.
No, Larpenteurs is just plural, not possessive.
Yes. Last is an adjective and an adverb as well as a noun and verb. An example is "At the party, Bill arrived last."
I had a great time at the party last night.
"Craig's" is a possessive noun.
howl
The proper adjective is American, describing the noun 'literature' as 'of America'.
The adjective in a sentence is the word that describes the subject (the subject is the basic thought that is being talked about in a sentence). Last night at the promenade, Beatriz looked truly lovely in her dark blue taffeta dress. Beatriz is the subject. Lovely is the adjective because it describes Beatriz. red
No, the pronoun 'our' is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to the speaker and one or more other people. The possessive adjective 'our' is a first person, plural pronoun.A personal pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific person or thing. The first person, plural personal pronouns are we as a subject and us as an object in a sentence.Examples:Jack and I are planning our vacation. (the possessive adjective 'our' describes the noun 'vacation' as belonging to Jack and the speaker)We went to the beach last year. It was a lot of fun for us. (the personal pronoun 'we' takes the place of Jack and the speaker as the subject of the sentence; the pronoun 'us' is the object of the preposition 'for')
For an accurate translation, use it in a sentence. It could be a verb, noun, adjective.