Blue eyes, light and direct; Can anyone tell me the french term for curly or smart quotation marks (quotes) (as against straight ones)? Her curly brown hair fell to her waist.
Festival curly hair
Retro curly bob
Curly romantic waves
Elegant Evening TopBun Curly hair bun styles, Messy hair updo, Curly
Usually with hair that would be color, so 'long curly black hair' or 'curly long black hair.' of course if the question is what kind of curly hair did you find? then a long black curly hair is an entirely legitimate answer.
The normal order for fact adjectives is size, age, shape, colour, material, origin is it correct then when i speak.
The adjective closest to the noun should be the most important, the most inherent.What students need to focus on are: Her shiny blonde hair fell to the middle of her back.She has brown hair, long and straight;
<< answer to second question.Unusual, but sounds pretty good to me, especially with some other sentences with parallel structure. She has brown hair, long and straight.I would leave a space between them, just as i would leave a space between an opening parenthesis and the word before it or between a closing parenthesis and the word after it.

We call them parentheses (one is a parenthesis) in ae.
This word order works for me.To us, brackets are [ ] (square brackets), { } (curly brackets) and < > (angle brackets). Crossed with tuna, and tuna's example.In another thread here (dating from may 2006) i found a link posted about the order of adjectives telling the following:
Both curly dark hair and dark curly hair sound fine to me.Fairly curly hair is less curly than curly hair, so which attribute is lessened is defined by the placement of fairly. If fact, that makes it an adverb or something else, not an adjective, right?!?1) opinion before fact (a nice italian restaurant) 2) certain combinations which we use a lot:

I have always heard and said the partial derivative as just the letters d y d x.
(opinion+little), (little+old) 3) defining adjectives at the end (leather jacket) the rest i find, as a native, very difficult to explain and distinguish.Unfortunately there is no common name for the partial derivative symbol or curly d.


