Hey there! I'm happy to help!
Most of the time, the adjective comes after the noun in Spanish. There are a few exceptions. Anything that clarifies a number or amount goes before a noun. This can be numbers or words like more, less, much, some, enough, too much, sufficient, etc.
A very important quality that must be known about a noun is usually put before the noun. For example, if you want to say sweet tea, you would say dulce té, not té dulce. The first means the actually type of tea called sweet tea, while the latter means any tea that is sweet. However, it's always better to put the adjective after the noun if you are not completely sure if the adjective is essential or not.
There are also some adjectives that change form when put before a noun to give it a different meaning. For example, grande. If you say río grande, that means the big river. If you put grande before a noun, it becomes gran and it now means great. Espero que tengas un gran día means I hope you have a great day. There are some other ones like this, and there's only around 15 common words that change like this, and you will usually be able to spot them.
I hope that this helps! Have a wonderful day! :D
Answer:
you say your greeting based on the time of the day
Explanation:
Buenos dias = good morning
Buenas tardes = good afternoon
Buenas noches = good night
some of these are feminine, so you put type "buenas" instead of "buenos"
Answer:
No entendí muy bien la pregunta pero lo ultimo esta bien escrito y es cierto con el parrafo de arriba
Es lenguaje figurado porque cuando ella entra la habitacion, la habitación no se esta luminando literalmente. Es solo una forma de lenguaje figurado para mostrar que bueno se siente cuando ella llega.