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Перевод слова


Перевод: adjective speek adjective


[прилагательное]
несамостоятельный; зависимый; подначальный; имеющий св`ойства прилагательного; относящийся к прилагательному;
[существительное]
имя прилагательное; прилагательное
[существительное]


Тезаурус:

  1. compound adjective
  2. However, the adjective "Venusian" is not normally used, but instead "Cytherean" (Si-the-re-an) after Cytherea , a Greek goddess of love.
  3. The toys they were using were called analogues, adjective check-lists and pseudo-clients with fake case histories the rules are such that all discovery and exploration is blocked through the control and manipulation of the "subject" and the relevant variables to obtain relevant data.
  4. The word waste in this context is both an imperative command and an adjective.
  5. the sentence grammar of English: adjective, adverb, noun, proper noun, verb, main verb, auxiliary verb, preposition, conjunction , etc., singular, plural, possessive, tense , etc., negative, comparative, superlative , etc., subject, object , etc.;
  6. In such cases the first signs of a dialectic occur: the actor is both experiencing and describing; an oscillation is set up between these two incompatible grammatical constructs, the verb and the adjective.
  7. A relative clause counts as dependent whereas an adjective modifying a noun clearly does not.
  8. He thought of himself as though he were an application form, for a job, a degree, a life, but when he thought of his mother, the adjective would not be expurgated, She was disappointed.
  9. However, if there is no free charge in the space between the conductors, and strictly for two-dimensional problems, there is a method to which the adjective general might be attached, a method that provides plenty of answers but not necessarily to the questions asked.
  10. The deification of the Emperors, introduced by Augustus, was not taken too seriously and signified little more than in later ages was implied by the adjective "Holy" in the title "Holy Roman Emperor".
  11. An adjective or descriptive phrase expressing some quality or attribute: William the Conqueror, the Virgin Queen.
  12. She would not be drawn out to talk about her work, to which she almost never referred without the adjective "menial".
  13. In any sentence, the appropriate interpretation of open can be determined from its grammatical nature (i.e. whether it is adjective, transitive or intransitive verb, etc.).

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