FACTOID # 117: In Germany and Italy, every second person owns a car.
 
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Encyclopedia > Adjective phrase

An adjective phrase tells which one, what kind of, or how many - about the noun or pronoun it modifies.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Phrases: Prepositional Phrases: The Big Daddy of Phrases — Infoplease.com (507 words)
A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and ends with a noun or a pronoun.
An adjectival phrase, as with an adjective, describes a noun or a pronoun.
The adjectival phrase “in the corner” describes the noun “something”; the adjectival phrase “of the desk” describes the noun “corner.”
Adjective - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1949 words)
Similarly, possessive adjectives, such as his or her, are sometimes called determinative possessive pronouns, and demonstrative adjectives, such as this or that, determinative demonstratives.
In English, an adjectival phrase may occur as a postmodifier to a noun (a bin full of toys), or as a predicate to a verb (the bin is full of toys and clothes).
A predicative adjective is not part of the noun phrase headed by the noun it modifies; rather, it is the complement of a verb or copula that links it to the noun.
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