This document discusses how nouns can function as adjectives by defining other nouns in a sentence. It provides 9 example sentences where the adjective is underlined, with the adjective often being a noun itself, such as "paper towels", "junkyard dog", "pickle jar", "apple juice", "onion sandwich", "cat food", "glue stick", "beef diet", and "automobile dealers".
This document discusses how nouns can function as adjectives by defining other nouns in a sentence. It provides 9 example sentences where the adjective is underlined, with the adjective often being a noun itself, such as "paper towels", "junkyard dog", "pickle jar", "apple juice", "onion sandwich", "cat food", "glue stick", "beef diet", and "automobile dealers".
This document discusses how nouns can function as adjectives by defining other nouns in a sentence. It provides 9 example sentences where the adjective is underlined, with the adjective often being a noun itself, such as "paper towels", "junkyard dog", "pickle jar", "apple juice", "onion sandwich", "cat food", "glue stick", "beef diet", and "automobile dealers".
function as adjectives. This happens when the “noun” is used to define a noun. Underline the adjective in each sentence that is often a noun. The first one is done for you.
1. Karen always wipes her runny nose with paper
towels. 2. Teasing a junkyard dog is a bad idea. 3. An intelligent person will never put his head into an empty pickle jar. 4. I hear that apple juice is a healthy drink. 5. Troy would like an onion sandwich with a touch of mustard. 6. Remind Kurt to stop eating cat food! 7. That’s what you get for using a glue stick as lipstick! 8. The chubby little frog refused to try the new beef diet. 9. Yes, there are automobile dealers you can trust.