No, "dress" is not an adjective. It is a noun that refers to a garment or outfit worn by someone. Adjectives are words that describe or modify nouns, whereas "dress" itself is the noun being described. In a sentence like "She wore a beautiful dress," "beautiful" is the adjective describing the noun "dress."
No. Dress is a noun, or a verb, with the adjective dressed. The related adjective dressy (fancy) has an adverb form, which is dressily.
Yes. A predicate adjective is one that follows a linking verb, but it's an adjective nonetheless.She wore a beautiful dress. The adjective beautiful describes the dress.That dress is beautiful. Beautiful is the adjective following the linking verb is. It is still describing the dress.
It most certainly is; the word dress is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a garment, a thing. The word dress is also a verb (dress, dresses, dressing, dressed) and an adjective (dress, dressier, dressiest). Example uses: Noun: The dress is new but the shoes are not. Verb: He can dress himself. Adjective: How great he looks in his dress uniform.
Cute is an adjective. Adjectives describe nouns so we say -- cute baby, cute dress, cute haircut. The words baby dress haircut are nouns.
No. The verb "is" is a linking verb, which makes "upstairs" an adjective.
No. Dress is a noun, or a verb, with the adjective dressed. The related adjective dressy (fancy) has an adverb form, which is dressily.
Yes. A predicate adjective is one that follows a linking verb, but it's an adjective nonetheless.She wore a beautiful dress. The adjective beautiful describes the dress.That dress is beautiful. Beautiful is the adjective following the linking verb is. It is still describing the dress.
Yes, attractive is an adjective. I.e. That dress is attractive.
Colourful is an adjective--a word that describes a noun. Example: Oh my! That is a colourful dress you are wearing.
It most certainly is; the word dress is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a garment, a thing. The word dress is also a verb (dress, dresses, dressing, dressed) and an adjective (dress, dressier, dressiest). Example uses: Noun: The dress is new but the shoes are not. Verb: He can dress himself. Adjective: How great he looks in his dress uniform.
"Darker" is an adjective in its comparative form.
Cute is an adjective. Adjectives describe nouns so we say -- cute baby, cute dress, cute haircut. The words baby dress haircut are nouns.
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. The verb "is" is a linking verb, which makes "upstairs" an adjective.
There are two ajactives they are prom and beautyful
The adjective forms of idealism are ideal or idealistic. Example uses:That is the ideal dress for the prom.He has an idealistic view of the situation.
dress up i think it is both because it depends on the the way the person that pronounced it said it