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german
4 years ago
13

The garden tools are covered with mud. Which word is a adjective

History
2 answers:
Andre45 [30]4 years ago
8 0

Answer:

Garden

Explanation:

An adjective is something that modifies a noun or describes it. I'm not 100% sure but this would seem like the most correct answer because it is telling you what type of tools they are.

wariber [46]4 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Garden

Explanation:

This can go many ways, as covered with mud is describing segment that is a term I dont know. but Garedn should be the Adj. bc it is describing what kind of tools are covered with mud.

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Wikimedia Commons

Francis Scott Key represented him in court. And then there was the time that Francis Scott Key, yes, that Baltimore attorney who wrote the lyrics to the national anthem, ineffectually represented Houston in a very important case. Houston had beat, caned, and called Ohio congressman William Stanbery a “darned rascal” on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, an incident that arose after Stanbery had publicly claimed that during his term as Tennessee governor, Houston had swindled his beloved Cherokee Indians. Hauled before Congress to answer for his alleged crime, Houston delivered his own closing argument, reportedly because Key was “indisposed” (read: hungover) at the trial. (Some reports have it that Houston was equally “indisposed,” but better able to marshal his thoughts from the defense bar.) Though Houston was quite persuasive in protection of his own honor—one woman in the gallery said “I had rather be Sam Houston in a dungeon than William Stanbery on a throne”—he was convicted, though he never paid a dime nor served a day behind bars for his offense. He hightailed it for Texas before the law could lay a finger on him. He had a huge fear of ticks. Houston was famously a drinker, at least for the first half of his life before his marriage to Margaret Lea. Haley, author of 2004’s Sam Houston, pointed out his favorite boozy Houston tale to Texas Monthly, which involved Houston, wine, and ticks. At the time, the divorced Houston was courting Anna Raguet of what is now the Lufkin/Nacogdoches area. She would spurn his advances, thanks in no small part to antics like the following, as related in Haley’s book:

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