Monster is a noun. Monstrous would be the adjective.
scary
As a noun anghenfil or clobyn;as an adjective anferth.
The adjective for "monster" is "monstrous." It describes something that is large, frightening, or grotesque, often evoking a sense of horror or dread. In a broader sense, it can also refer to something that is extraordinarily bad or unacceptable.
Victor Frankenstein was the scientist, who created the monster. The monster is often called Frankenstein's monster, or simply Frankenstein.
The possessive form for the noun monster is monster's.Example: The monster's teeth were fearsome.
As a noun, anghenfil (monster) or clamp (mass, lump; monster); as an adjective anferth (huge, monster).
scary
The black, terrifing monster ate the city.
As a noun anghenfil or clobyn;as an adjective anferth.
Freaky , chic and fly Monster High, where student bodies lie.
The proper adjective is "American," derived from the proper noun "America."
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No. It is a rather unusual hyphenated compound adjective. There may exist somewhere in fiction an actual nine-headed monster.
This is a four-metre table.My brother is a part-time worker.Don't go near the green-eyed monster.
It depends on how it is used. It can be an adjective meaning-having a heading or course.shaped or grown into a head.having the mentality, personality, emotional control, or quality specified, or possessing a specified number of heads (usually used in combination): a slow-headed student; a two-headed monster.
Yes, the pronoun "its" is a possessive adjectivedescribing the noun "head" as belonging to the subject of the sentence (monster).A possessive adjective is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something in the sentence.The possessive adjectives are: my, your, his, her, their, its.
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