The word 'girl' is a noun, a word for a person.
The related adjective "girly" might be appropriate, but has a connotation of frilliness.To simply define gender, you can use the adjective female.
Perhaps she made the room seem larger.
It is a describing adjective.
'An' is not an adjective, it is an indefinite article usually used before a vowel sound.
Yes, considerable is an adjective. Example: The considerable girl helped the child. Considerable modifies girl.
Use the suffix -ly when you want to change an adjective to an adverb. Ex: The girl is beautiful; adjective The girl spun around beautifully; adverb
girlish
The word 'girl' is a noun, a word for a person.
The related adjective "girly" might be appropriate, but has a connotation of frilliness.To simply define gender, you can use the adjective female.
Perhaps she made the room seem larger.
It is a describing adjective.
Girl is a common noun.
No, "running" is a verb in this sentence, showing the action of the small girl. An adjective is a word that describes or modifies a noun, such as "small" describing the girl.
show me a example of predicate adjective involing a sentence "The girl is TIRED tonight."
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.An adjective is a word used to describe a noun.A basic sentence is made up of a subject (a noun or pronoun) and a verb (an action or a state of being). A sentence must have a verb. Examples:The girl sings. (subject noun 'girl', verb 'sings')The little girl sings. (adjective 'little' describes the noun 'girl')A sentence can be simple or complex. In a complex sentence, a noun functions as the subject of the sentence or a clause, and as an object as the direct object or indirect object of the verb; and the object of a preposition. Examples:I heard a girl singing. (the noun 'girl' is subject of the clause; the clause 'a girl singing' is the direct object of the verb 'heard')We saw the little girl. (the noun 'girl' is the direct object of the verb 'saw', described by the adjective 'little')I gave the little girl a book. (the direct object of the verb 'gave' is the noun 'book'; the indirect object of the verb is the noun 'girl')The book was for a little girl. (the noun 'girl' is the object of the preposition 'for')A noun can also function as an adjective to describe a noun. This function is called an attributive noun (also called a noun adjunct). Example:I gave the little girl a story book. (the noun 'story' describes the noun 'book')A noun and an adjective can also function as subject complements.Subject complements are:A predicate nominative is a noun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject.A predicate adjective is the adjective following a linking verb which modifies (describes) the subject of the sentence.The girl was a child. (the noun 'child' restates the subject noun 'girl')The little girl was happy. (the adjective 'happy' is the predicate adjective describing the subject noun 'girl')
An adjective is a word that describes the qualities, traits or a number of a noun. therefore the adjective in the sentence is "forty table"