adjective modifying adjective
Answers
Answer:
"excessive "is also never an adverb and that's why it cannot modify fast it can only modify nouns just as hazardous activity adjectives never modify other adjectives if you ever find an adjective modifying an adjective then either one of them is an adverb for one of them is a noun.
Answer:
Adjectives are words that modify nouns. They are often called “describing words” because they give us further details about a noun, such as what it looks like (the white horse), how many there are (the three boys) or which one it is (the last house). Adjectives do not modify verbs or other adjectives. Most often, adjectives are easy to identify in a sentence because they fall right before the nouns they modify.
Example:
The old clock hung upon the wall.
A white horse galloped across the lush, green grass.
Have you met our three handsome boys?
Ours is the last house on the street.
In these sentences, old, white, lush, green, three, handsome, and last are all adjectives; they give us a more detailed description of the nouns they modify. An adjective might answer the mental questions, “What kind is it?” (as with an old clock, a white horse, the lush grass, the green grass, or the handsome boys), “How many are there?” (as with the three boys), or “Which one is it?” (as with the last house). Adjectives that answer the first question are descriptive adjectives. Those that answer the other two questions are limiting adjectives—they restrict or quantify a noun rather than describing it.