Huh? What does this question mean?
Adjectives are descriptive words so in that sentence they would be:
historical
enamored
whirlwind
noun phrase: the little girl
prepositional phrase: on the corner
adjectival phrase:playing in town
adverbial phrase: by the fire department
The correct the correct answer is C. An artifact is anything that is made by humans. it can be discovered during an archeological gig, but the hand drawing you made in your kindergarten is also an artifact!
Its "Tom Smiths". Think of it this way: You are not saying there are many Toms, you are saying there are many of them with the same surname, "Smith". In the same way, we don't say, "There are Trump's Tower all over the world", we say, "There are Trump Towers all over the world". It's no different if the first word of a two-word proper noun includes an apostrophe, such as Bob's Bakery. In this instance, we would say, "There are two Bob's Bakeries in the city."
In short, the second word of two-word proper noun is made plural when we are talking about more than one of that proper noun.
examples:
- We own two Apple Macbooks; not Apples Macbook
- There are not two White Houses in the US; not Whites House.
- There are many "Tom Smiths" in the Manhattan phone book; not "Toms Smith".