The document provides background information on the Harlem Renaissance, which was a cultural movement centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City in the 1920s. It discusses how the Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to northern cities contributed to the emergence of the movement. Key figures associated with the Harlem Renaissance included painter Jacob Lawrence, poet Langston Hughes, and musicians Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, and Bessie Smith. The movement helped redefine understandings of African American culture and marked the beginning of black urban society in the United States.
Longer Adjectives And Irregular Forms 2Mary Garrison
This document discusses two types of adjectives: longer adjectives that have three or more syllables like "dangerous", "fashionable", and "powerful", and irregular adjectives that change form like adding "-er", "-most", "-est" or changing when plural such as "good" to "better" to "best" and "bad" to "worse" to "worst". It was written by Myles Josh Austin.
This document provides instruction on using the pronouns "I" and "me" correctly. It explains that "I" should be used as the subject of a sentence, while "me" should be used as the object. When combining with another person's name using "and", apply the "and trick" - cover up the word "and" plus the other name and use whichever singular pronoun sounds correct. Several examples are provided demonstrating the correct usage of "I" and "me" alone and with another person's name.
There are two types of verbs: action verbs and linking verbs. Action verbs express physical or mental activity and can be transitive or intransitive, while linking verbs express a state of being and are always intransitive. Verbs can also be transitive or intransitive depending on whether their action passes to a direct object. Auxiliary verbs help the main verb but do not function as verbs themselves.
The document provides background information on the Harlem Renaissance, which was a cultural movement centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City in the 1920s. It discusses how the Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to northern cities contributed to the emergence of the movement. Key figures associated with the Harlem Renaissance included painter Jacob Lawrence, poet Langston Hughes, and musicians Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, and Bessie Smith. The movement helped redefine understandings of African American culture and marked the beginning of black urban society in the United States.
The document announces a production called Seedfolks where 12 people with an empty lot and lots of ideas struggle to grow their plants and themselves and end up finding each other. It is coming to homerooms on March 1, 2010 and is being produced by Sarah Harrison, Dominique Wagner, Liliana Martinez, and Stephanie Murillo with sponsorship from LSD Corporations.
This document discusses adverbs and provides examples of how adverbs modify verbs by describing manner, time, place, or degree. Specifically, it notes that adverbs describe or modify verbs by naming how, when, where, or to what extent an action is done. It also notes that adverbs usually end in "ly" and provide examples where adverbs such as "carefully", "quickly", and "extremely" modify verbs to describe the action.
The document is an advertisement for the upcoming Halo game "Halo: The Fall of Reach" which tells the story of the SPARTAN John who is a "super soldier" tasked with saving mankind from a horrible war against the alien Covenant who are plotting to take over the galaxy. John must stop the Covenant's plans to restore peace to the galaxy.
The document provides background information on the Harlem Renaissance, which was a cultural movement centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City in the 1920s. It discusses how the Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to northern cities contributed to the emergence of the movement. Key figures associated with the Harlem Renaissance included painter Jacob Lawrence, poet Langston Hughes, and musicians Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, and Bessie Smith. The movement helped redefine understandings of African American culture and marked the beginning of black urban society in the United States.
Longer Adjectives And Irregular Forms 2Mary Garrison
This document discusses two types of adjectives: longer adjectives that have three or more syllables like "dangerous", "fashionable", and "powerful", and irregular adjectives that change form like adding "-er", "-most", "-est" or changing when plural such as "good" to "better" to "best" and "bad" to "worse" to "worst". It was written by Myles Josh Austin.
This document provides instruction on using the pronouns "I" and "me" correctly. It explains that "I" should be used as the subject of a sentence, while "me" should be used as the object. When combining with another person's name using "and", apply the "and trick" - cover up the word "and" plus the other name and use whichever singular pronoun sounds correct. Several examples are provided demonstrating the correct usage of "I" and "me" alone and with another person's name.
There are two types of verbs: action verbs and linking verbs. Action verbs express physical or mental activity and can be transitive or intransitive, while linking verbs express a state of being and are always intransitive. Verbs can also be transitive or intransitive depending on whether their action passes to a direct object. Auxiliary verbs help the main verb but do not function as verbs themselves.
The document provides background information on the Harlem Renaissance, which was a cultural movement centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City in the 1920s. It discusses how the Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to northern cities contributed to the emergence of the movement. Key figures associated with the Harlem Renaissance included painter Jacob Lawrence, poet Langston Hughes, and musicians Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, and Bessie Smith. The movement helped redefine understandings of African American culture and marked the beginning of black urban society in the United States.
The document announces a production called Seedfolks where 12 people with an empty lot and lots of ideas struggle to grow their plants and themselves and end up finding each other. It is coming to homerooms on March 1, 2010 and is being produced by Sarah Harrison, Dominique Wagner, Liliana Martinez, and Stephanie Murillo with sponsorship from LSD Corporations.
This document discusses adverbs and provides examples of how adverbs modify verbs by describing manner, time, place, or degree. Specifically, it notes that adverbs describe or modify verbs by naming how, when, where, or to what extent an action is done. It also notes that adverbs usually end in "ly" and provide examples where adverbs such as "carefully", "quickly", and "extremely" modify verbs to describe the action.
The document is an advertisement for the upcoming Halo game "Halo: The Fall of Reach" which tells the story of the SPARTAN John who is a "super soldier" tasked with saving mankind from a horrible war against the alien Covenant who are plotting to take over the galaxy. John must stop the Covenant's plans to restore peace to the galaxy.
Adjectives are words that describe or modify nouns and pronouns. Examples of adjectives include "purple" describing "gorilla", "funny" describing "frogs", and "nasty" describing "school food". Adjectives can also modify nouns by describing attributes like "soft" describing the monkey's fur and "orange" describing the color of the shoe the dog ate.
Adverbs are modifying words that describe verbs by indicating how, why, who, or to what extent an action is performed. They usually end in -ly and examples include really, suddenly, quickly, nearly, now, later, and soon. Adverbs modify verbs by providing additional details about the verb such as how it was performed.
Adjectives are words that modify nouns or pronouns, such as describing someone as "older" in the phrase "my sister, who is older than I am." If a group of words contains a subject and verb and acts as an adjective, it is called an adjective clause. Stripping a clause of its subject and verb leaves an adjective phrase, such as "keeping my family in the poorhouse" in "He is the man keeping my family in the poorhouse."
This document discusses longer adjectives that have three or more syllables and can be used to modify words to make them more descriptive, such as using "more beautiful" instead of just "beautiful" or "more difficult" instead of just "difficult." It also notes that two-syllable adjectives ending in -ing, -ed, -ful, and -less can also be used in the same way to modify words, like using "more tired" instead of just "tired" or "more boring" instead of just "boring."
This document discusses special spelling rules for adjectives and how to form adverbs from adjectives. Most adjectives can be made into adverbs by adding "ly", but if the adjective ends in a silent "e", the "e" is dropped before adding "ly". Adjectives are used to describe or modify nouns and pronouns, and the document provides examples showing how adding more adjectives makes the descriptions more specific.
This document discusses rules for using the superlative form of adjectives in English. Adjectives with three or more syllables or two-syllable adjectives ending in -ing, -end, -ful, and -less take "most" before them in the superlative form. Examples are provided such as "most beautiful", "most difficult", and "most tired".
The document contains a single sentence from The Last Olympian by Rick Riordan describing a moment where a woman grabs the narrator's wrist on the front porch, startling them. The sentence uses four nouns, four pronouns, two verbs, two prepositions, and one article. It consists of two independent clauses joined by a semicolon.
A superlative adjective is used to describe something as the most or least of its kind. One-syllable adjectives usually form their superlative by adding -est to the end. Examples of one-syllable superlative adjectives include oldest, youngest, cheapest, tallest, and shortest.
An adjective is a word that describes or modifies a noun or pronoun. The document provides examples of adjectives like "brown", "cute", and "cuddly" describing dogs, and "black" and "creep" describing cats. It concludes by thanking the reader for learning about adjectives.
This document defines and provides examples of several types of figurative language:
1. Similes use "like" or "as" to compare two things, such as "hungry as a horse."
2. Metaphors directly compare two things without using "like" or "as", such as "the girl was a fish in the water."
3. Personification gives human traits to non-human things, for example "the flowers danced in the wind."
4. Alliteration repeats initial consonant sounds, such as "Stan the strong surfer."
5. Onomatopoeia are words that imitate sounds, like "chug chug chug."
The document contains a single sentence from the book Fablehaven by Brandon Mull stating "As I understand, you were commanded not to look out the window." It provides context that the character was instructed not to look outside. The summary ends by citing the author and year of publication.
The passage describes two short sentences about what can sometimes be seen through trees - either a large, noble house or just a driveway. It provides the context that the quote is from the 2006 novel Fablehaven by Brandon Mull.
The document outlines lessons from a class analyzing Coca-Cola's advertising techniques over time. It includes assignments for students to watch American Idol to analyze Coca-Cola commercials and discuss how their advertising has changed. Students will also research and write about Coca-Cola's history in advertising and discuss why major corporations target advertising at teenagers.
Pronouns words that rename people, places, thingsMary Garrison
The document discusses different types of pronouns including personal pronouns, indefinite pronouns, demonstrative pronouns, interrogative pronouns, possessive pronouns, and reflexive pronouns. It provides examples of each pronoun category and encourages identifying pronouns in sample sentences. The document also includes an activity where students must construct a message to Earth for help in Martian but can only use 4 categories of pronouns to communicate their situation.
The document discusses several key elements of poetry including form, rhyme, meter, and imagery. It provides examples of different types of poems such as haiku, limericks, narrative poems, and free verse. Specific poetic devices like rhyme schemes, couplets, and stanzas are also defined. Themes and tones in poetry are determined based on word choice, punctuation, form, and other stylistic elements. Anthologies are collections of poems often with a shared theme, type, or tone selected by an editor.
This document contains a Jeopardy-style game about literary terms organized into categories such as "Big Words", "Rhyme Time", "Word Plays", and "Poetic Types". Each category contains questions ranging from $100 to $500 about terms such as onomatopoeia, alliteration, personification, free verse, and ballads. The final jeopardy question asks about oxymorons. Directions are provided at the top for viewing the game as an online presentation.
This document discusses various propaganda and advertising techniques used to persuade people throughout Coca-Cola's history. It outlines techniques like bandwagon messaging in the 1920s emphasizing widespread popularity, plain folks appeals in the 1930s portraying friendship, snob appeal in the 1950s, patriotism in the 1970s, humor in 1999, and celebrity endorsements like Mean Joe Green in 1979. It concludes by asking what advertising techniques Coca-Cola is using today.
The document describes the 1906 earthquake that destroyed San Francisco. It discusses how people would feel and what they would have left if everything was lost in a disaster. The document is based on a book about the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and was created as a PowerPoint presentation by four students.
The document provides background information on the Harlem Renaissance, which was a cultural movement centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City in the 1920s. It discusses how the Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to northern cities contributed to the Harlem Renaissance. Prominent figures associated with the movement included painter Jacob Lawrence, poet Langston Hughes, and musicians Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong.
Adjectives are words that describe or modify nouns and pronouns. Examples of adjectives include "purple" describing "gorilla", "funny" describing "frogs", and "nasty" describing "school food". Adjectives can also modify nouns by describing attributes like "soft" describing the monkey's fur and "orange" describing the color of the shoe the dog ate.
Adverbs are modifying words that describe verbs by indicating how, why, who, or to what extent an action is performed. They usually end in -ly and examples include really, suddenly, quickly, nearly, now, later, and soon. Adverbs modify verbs by providing additional details about the verb such as how it was performed.
Adjectives are words that modify nouns or pronouns, such as describing someone as "older" in the phrase "my sister, who is older than I am." If a group of words contains a subject and verb and acts as an adjective, it is called an adjective clause. Stripping a clause of its subject and verb leaves an adjective phrase, such as "keeping my family in the poorhouse" in "He is the man keeping my family in the poorhouse."
This document discusses longer adjectives that have three or more syllables and can be used to modify words to make them more descriptive, such as using "more beautiful" instead of just "beautiful" or "more difficult" instead of just "difficult." It also notes that two-syllable adjectives ending in -ing, -ed, -ful, and -less can also be used in the same way to modify words, like using "more tired" instead of just "tired" or "more boring" instead of just "boring."
This document discusses special spelling rules for adjectives and how to form adverbs from adjectives. Most adjectives can be made into adverbs by adding "ly", but if the adjective ends in a silent "e", the "e" is dropped before adding "ly". Adjectives are used to describe or modify nouns and pronouns, and the document provides examples showing how adding more adjectives makes the descriptions more specific.
This document discusses rules for using the superlative form of adjectives in English. Adjectives with three or more syllables or two-syllable adjectives ending in -ing, -end, -ful, and -less take "most" before them in the superlative form. Examples are provided such as "most beautiful", "most difficult", and "most tired".
The document contains a single sentence from The Last Olympian by Rick Riordan describing a moment where a woman grabs the narrator's wrist on the front porch, startling them. The sentence uses four nouns, four pronouns, two verbs, two prepositions, and one article. It consists of two independent clauses joined by a semicolon.
A superlative adjective is used to describe something as the most or least of its kind. One-syllable adjectives usually form their superlative by adding -est to the end. Examples of one-syllable superlative adjectives include oldest, youngest, cheapest, tallest, and shortest.
An adjective is a word that describes or modifies a noun or pronoun. The document provides examples of adjectives like "brown", "cute", and "cuddly" describing dogs, and "black" and "creep" describing cats. It concludes by thanking the reader for learning about adjectives.
This document defines and provides examples of several types of figurative language:
1. Similes use "like" or "as" to compare two things, such as "hungry as a horse."
2. Metaphors directly compare two things without using "like" or "as", such as "the girl was a fish in the water."
3. Personification gives human traits to non-human things, for example "the flowers danced in the wind."
4. Alliteration repeats initial consonant sounds, such as "Stan the strong surfer."
5. Onomatopoeia are words that imitate sounds, like "chug chug chug."
The document contains a single sentence from the book Fablehaven by Brandon Mull stating "As I understand, you were commanded not to look out the window." It provides context that the character was instructed not to look outside. The summary ends by citing the author and year of publication.
The passage describes two short sentences about what can sometimes be seen through trees - either a large, noble house or just a driveway. It provides the context that the quote is from the 2006 novel Fablehaven by Brandon Mull.
The document outlines lessons from a class analyzing Coca-Cola's advertising techniques over time. It includes assignments for students to watch American Idol to analyze Coca-Cola commercials and discuss how their advertising has changed. Students will also research and write about Coca-Cola's history in advertising and discuss why major corporations target advertising at teenagers.
Pronouns words that rename people, places, thingsMary Garrison
The document discusses different types of pronouns including personal pronouns, indefinite pronouns, demonstrative pronouns, interrogative pronouns, possessive pronouns, and reflexive pronouns. It provides examples of each pronoun category and encourages identifying pronouns in sample sentences. The document also includes an activity where students must construct a message to Earth for help in Martian but can only use 4 categories of pronouns to communicate their situation.
The document discusses several key elements of poetry including form, rhyme, meter, and imagery. It provides examples of different types of poems such as haiku, limericks, narrative poems, and free verse. Specific poetic devices like rhyme schemes, couplets, and stanzas are also defined. Themes and tones in poetry are determined based on word choice, punctuation, form, and other stylistic elements. Anthologies are collections of poems often with a shared theme, type, or tone selected by an editor.
This document contains a Jeopardy-style game about literary terms organized into categories such as "Big Words", "Rhyme Time", "Word Plays", and "Poetic Types". Each category contains questions ranging from $100 to $500 about terms such as onomatopoeia, alliteration, personification, free verse, and ballads. The final jeopardy question asks about oxymorons. Directions are provided at the top for viewing the game as an online presentation.
This document discusses various propaganda and advertising techniques used to persuade people throughout Coca-Cola's history. It outlines techniques like bandwagon messaging in the 1920s emphasizing widespread popularity, plain folks appeals in the 1930s portraying friendship, snob appeal in the 1950s, patriotism in the 1970s, humor in 1999, and celebrity endorsements like Mean Joe Green in 1979. It concludes by asking what advertising techniques Coca-Cola is using today.
The document describes the 1906 earthquake that destroyed San Francisco. It discusses how people would feel and what they would have left if everything was lost in a disaster. The document is based on a book about the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and was created as a PowerPoint presentation by four students.
The document provides background information on the Harlem Renaissance, which was a cultural movement centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City in the 1920s. It discusses how the Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to northern cities contributed to the Harlem Renaissance. Prominent figures associated with the movement included painter Jacob Lawrence, poet Langston Hughes, and musicians Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong.
The document provides background information on the Harlem Renaissance, which was a cultural movement centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City in the 1920s. It discusses how the Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to northern cities contributed to the Harlem Renaissance. Prominent figures associated with the movement included painter Jacob Lawrence, poet Langston Hughes, and musicians Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong.
This document discusses various uses of commas in writing including with direct addresses, appositives, dialogue, compound and complex sentences, items in a series, prepositional phrases at the beginning of sentences, interjections or onomatopoeia at the beginning, and transition words at the beginning. It provides examples of how to use commas in each of these situations to add detail and clarity to writing.
The document provides background information on the Harlem Renaissance, which was a cultural movement centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City in the 1920s. It discusses how the Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to northern cities contributed to the Harlem Renaissance. Prominent figures associated with the movement included painter Jacob Lawrence, poet Langston Hughes, and musicians Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong.
The document discusses the Harlem Renaissance, which was a period in the 1920s and 1930s when Harlem, New York became a center of African American culture and art. It led to major developments in African American literature, music, dance, visual art, film, and political thought. Key events that influenced the Renaissance included the Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to northern cities, the growth of an urban black middle class, and civil rights movements led by figures like W.E.B. Du Bois and Marcus Garvey.
Seedfolks by Paul Fleischmann is a book that tells the stories of multiple characters in a neighborhood who come together to transform a vacant lot into a community garden. The stories show how the garden helps the characters in different ways such as helping Kim deal with her father's death, helping Gonzalo's grandfather, and teaching Amir that there are friends in America. Florence, a descendent of freed slaves, reflects on how the garden shows that small actions can have large effects, like seeds growing into plants.
This one sentence document appears to be discussing practicing with a seedfolks trailer. However, there is not enough contextual information or details provided in the document to generate a meaningful 3 sentence summary. The document contains only one word that may reference seedfolks, which seems to be a proper noun, but without more surrounding context no clear main points, essential information or high level understanding can be discerned.
A 13-year-old Jewish boy named Jacob Kauffman loses his family in a devastating earthquake in San Francisco while walking to his uncle's house with a stray dog. As Jacob and his dog search through the fallen buildings and cracked streets, they embark on a horrifying yet exciting adventure to find his missing family members. However, it remains uncertain if Jacob will ever be reunited with his family in the aftermath of the disaster.
Some adjectives have irregular comparative and superlative forms that do not share the same root as the positive form, such as "bad", "worse", and "worst". Longer adjectives describe an object using multiple words like "more beautiful" or "most valuable" and typically modify the object being described with terms like "least", "less", "more", or "most". Longer adjectives are called such because they are longer descriptions than regular one-word adjectives.
Adverbs are words that modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. They often end in -ly in English. Adverbs describe how, when, where, or to what extent something is done. Examples of adverbs include very, nearly, always, suddenly, now, and totally. Adverbs modify verbs by describing when, where, how, or to what extent the action occurred.
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A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
Liberal Approach to the Study of Indian Politics.pdf
Ag And Ep 7th
1. By: Edward and Alejandro Predicate and Demonstrative Adjectives
2. Predicate Adjective’s A predicate adjective is a adjective that’s in the predicate part of a sentence. Example- The Dingo is a ferocious animal with very sharp teeth.
3. Demonstrative Adjectives Demonstrative adjectives is used specify particular instance or set of instances of a noun. Example-This , that, these, those