Nouns don't describe things; adjectives describe.
That's it water.
You can make it more exact by adding an adjective to describe the noun eg
dirty water
chlorinated water
salt water
tap water
etc
An adjective describes a verb, and an adverb describes a noun
A word that describes a noun is an adjective
No. An adjective describes a noun and an adverb describes a verb.
A noun that describes an arctic fox is mammal.
No, an adverb describes a verb or an adjective. An adjective is the word that describes a noun.
No, it's an adjective. It DESCRIBES what a NOUN is.
it is a adj. it describes a noun like the noun is dog the adj. is playfulness While an adjective describes a noun (the DOG is PLAYFUL), an adverb describes a verb (the dog BARKED PLAYFULLY).
Adjectives modify nouns. Adverbs modify verbs.
The water cycle is a noun. It describes the continuous process of water moving from the Earth's surface to the atmosphere and back again through evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and runoff.
An adjective describes a noun. noun = dog adjective = black / big / smelly a big black smelly dog
The noun that describes the noun-pronoun agreement is "agreement".
No, "rigid" is not a noun. It is an adjective that describes something is stiff, inflexible, or unyielding.