Not usually. It is usually a preposition or conjunction. It does have archaic or maritime use as an adjective: - Later years may be described as "after years" - The rear (aft) of a ship is the "after end" of the ship
The adjective sturdy modifies ship. The phrase wine-dark as an adjective modifies sea. Bravely is the adverb, modifying sailed.
The adjective is big, describing the noun eyes.
The suffix -ship forms the noun 'friendship'.The suffix -ly forms the adjective 'friendly'.The suffix -less forms the adjective 'friendless'.
No. Titanic is a proper noun, the name of a specific ship. Outside of the ship, the word "titanic" is an adjective, not a noun. If you're using it as a noun then you're talking about the ship (or the movie named after the ship, but that's still a proper noun).
evil
The word submarine can be a noun or an adjective.(Note that as an adjective it means underwater, not the type of submersible ship.)
ship
wrecked example: the wrecked ship
Not usually. It is usually a preposition or conjunction. It does have archaic or maritime use as an adjective: - Later years may be described as "after years" - The rear (aft) of a ship is the "after end" of the ship
The adjective sturdy modifies ship. The phrase wine-dark as an adjective modifies sea. Bravely is the adverb, modifying sailed.
The adjective is big, describing the noun eyes.
It can be (a derelict ship, derelict in his duty).The word derelict means left behind, abandoned, or neglected. It can be a noun for a derelict ship.
Yes, it can be (a docked ship). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to dock) and can be used as an adjective to mean "tied up at a dock."
What word in the following sentence is an adjective Jason's sturdy ship sailed bravely across? sturdy , wine-dark. Who sailed across the sea in 1492 . Thats the question by the way.Answer : sturdy is the adjective as it modifies/describes the noun ship.
an adverb modifying an adjective means to describe into better detail likethe ship was VERY largerather thenthe ship was large
Not usually. There are two rare cases: - The archaic use to mean later : his after years - The nautical use meaning the aft or rear of a ship: the after end of the ship