Imagine you are reading and you find a confusing part or word. If you don’t ask the question to find out you will never know what that meant same goes for scientists
Really bruh
Once upon a clock(time) there was a child 11 years old named Sam, he went everyday to cycle in the park. There is a big hole once he was cycling in the park and falls into the he shouted help me "HELP ME HELP ME!!!!!", no one hears suddenly a boy came and saw him in the big hole his name was Aditya he brought a long rope and tied on the tree and then he slowly and carefully jumped inside the big hole then after sometime they both came out of the big hole and after that they became friends and cycle together.
The End (this ain't Cinderella )
Answer:
<u>A gerund</u>
Explanation:
A gerund is a word that looks like a verb but that does not act as one, and that, instead, acts as a noun in a sentence. It is formed with a verb root plus the ending “ing,” like “winning” and “thinking.” The sentence provided contains a gerund, namely, “acting” which in this case functions as a predicate noun, completing the linking verb “be” and renaming the noun “his major.”
The first word in the sentence is a pronoun- not an adjective.
The second option - Australian is in fact an adjective, it gives some information about the terrier.
the second option - children - is a noun, so it is not an adjective.
And the last option is a verb,
So the correct answer is B - this is the only adjective.