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Elizabeth
The food was finger-licking. Is 'finger-licking' an adjective?
2010年5月31日 16:16
回答 · 7
3
In a grammatically correct sentence, every word MUST function as some part of speech. So, yes ... "finger-licking" is a hyphenated construction that functions as an adjective. These are not uncommon:
"That was an eye-popping display of strength!"
"Our end-of-year sale begins tomorrow."
"The two teams will meet in a best-of-five series to decide the championship."
2010年5月31日
1
Yes, in this sentence 'finger-lickin' functions as an adjective. It describes the noun - the food.
In the phrase 'finger-lickin' good' it is an adverb, modifying the adjective - good.
2010年6月1日
1
Of all you folks, really only Joe is right; 'finger-licking' really functions as an adjective; like:
"A beautiful event."
"An eye-catching event."
2010年5月31日
1
"Finger-licking" means just that: you lick your fingers, to get all the taste of the food.
The full phrase is "finger-licking good" (=delicious!). I can't really imagine using "finger-licking" separate, unless you were making a joke.
2010年5月31日
1
Finger licking is not an adjective, its a phrase actually which simply means "excellent", specially for foods.
It was originated by KFC, as its advertising slogan.
2010年5月31日
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Elizabeth
語学スキル
中国語 (普通話), 英語, スペイン語
言語学習
英語, スペイン語
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