jueves, 26 de julio de 2012

good
liar
abusive
sincere
fearful
brave
poor
rich
bad
The adjective (Latin adjectīvus, "which is added") is a part of speech or word class which complements to a noun or name to call it, expresses characteristics or properties attributed to a noun, whether concrete (the green book, the big book), whether abstract (the book difficult). These adjectives accompanying noun (book) and are intended to specify or highlight some of its features and is said to determine what, then, to add an adjective and not talk about any book, but just a green book. Of significance, according to a quality attributed to a noun, rather abstract (knowable by the mind, as in "difficult book") or specific ("perceptible by the senses, as in" Green Book ") In position prefixed to a noun apocopan some adjectives, ie lose some of their final elements. For example: a good man> a good name a large territory> a large territory For traditional grammar classified the possessive and other kinds of determinants, such as adjectives apocopados: a) in male and female, singular and plural: 1) possessive adjectives: - My> me, - Yours> you, - His> his; 2) any indefinite adjective: - Any> any man / woman, - Any> any male / female; b) the masculine singular only: 1) determinative adjectives: - Any> any man, - None> no man, - First> first man, - Third> third man,
fool
intelligent
fat
thin
studious
beautifull
ugly
black
white
clean
small
adjectives on PhotoPeach