"Located" describes the state or position of the house.
Past participles (like "located") can function as adjectives when they describe a noun.
"Frightened" describes the puppy, so it is an adjective.
"Puppy" is a noun, and "looked" is a verb.
This test is harder than the last one.
"Harder" is the correct comparative form of "hard" to compare two things.
"Dear" describes the noun "companion," so it is an adjective.
"Eggs" is a noun, and "Please" is an interjection/request word.
An adjective clause is a dependent clause that describes a noun.
"Which is my favourite season" describes "Summer," making it the adjective clause in the sentence.
Compound adjective is formed when two or more words are combined to describe a noun, like "five-star" in this case.
It modifies the noun "hotel," describing the quality or rating of the services offered.
There are two kinds of adjective clauses:
1. Restrictive
2. Non-restrictive.
An adjective clause describes a noun and begins with a relative pronoun like that or which.
In this sentence it describes the fruit by specifying how it is grown.
"Taller" is the correct comparative form of the regular adjective "tall".
Regular adjectives typically form the comparative by adding “-er” (e.g., tall → taller).
"Who did impressive speech on Pakistan day" describes the noun "Sajid," making it an adjective clause.
It modifies and provides more information about the subject "Sajid."
Use “most interesting” for the superlative form to compare with all other books.
It fits the phrase "ever read," implying the highest degree.