The adjective 'eldest' is a synonym for the adjective 'oldest'.There is no difference between eldest and oldest.
Oldest is an adjective; for example: the oldest man
The word "oldest" is the adjective, modifying the word son.
Predicate: "is" Adjective: "oldest" Noun: "dancing"
Adjectives describe nouns.The large dog ate the tasty meat.large is an adjective it describes the noun dog. Tasty is an adject ive it describes the noun meat.I am hungry.Hungry is an adjective it describe the noun I.When there is more than one adjective before a noun they go in a particular order.opinion - size - shape - colour - material + noun.eg A lovely, big, round, blue, cotton dress.Adjectives also allow us to compare things and to show degrees of comparison.My cat is oldMy cat is older than yours - comparative adjectiveMy cat is the oldest in the street - superlative adjective
The adjective 'eldest' is a synonym for the adjective 'oldest'.There is no difference between eldest and oldest.
Oldest is an adjective; for example: the oldest man
The word "oldest" is the adjective, modifying the word son.
Predicate: "is" Adjective: "oldest" Noun: "dancing"
Oldest can be used as a superlative adjective to describe the age or seniority of someone or something. For example, "She is the oldest sibling in her family" or "This is the oldest building in the city."
Words with -est at the end are called "superlative" forms. The word "oldest" is an adjective.
Depending on its usage in a sentence, it could be many different things, a noun, an adjective or an adverb as I can think of them.Adjective:The elderly lady walked down the streetAdverb:She began to realize that she had become elderlyNoun:The elderly in our community deserve more respect.
'Oldest' is not an adverb. It is an adjective. Its form is superlative (old, older, oldest). Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, prepositions, conjunctions, or other adverbs. Adjectives modify nouns or pronouns.
The word "oldest" is an adjective. It is used to describe the superlative form of "old" when comparing three or more things in terms of age.
No, "older" is not an abstract noun. It is a comparative adjective used to describe the age of someone or something in relation to another person or object.
No, the word 'older' is not a noun at all. The word 'older' is the comparative form of the adjective 'old':positive, oldcomparative, oldersuperlative, oldest
Hinduism is the Oldest, and Zoroastrianism is the third oldest.