No. Class (style) is a noun, but it is sometimes used in place of the adjective 'classy' (sophisticated, upscale) in terms such as "a class act."
Similarly, class (noun for a group or school group) can be used as a noun adjunct in terms such as "class clown" and "class action."
No, it is a plural noun. The word class can be used as an adjective meaning classy.
Pla.cid-Calm;mild Adjective She is very placid in class
"Something" is classed as a pronoun, and to be more precise, a compound pronoun. Pronouns are used instead of nouns, noun phrases and noun clauses; in this instant, the word "something" is represnting an event, that is, a noun.
Yes, it describes the placement of something, therefore is an adjective (eg. "Today, I came first in the class exam"). It can also be an adverb in the context of "First, I will do this." (replaces the mostly archaic form firstly)
The word class is a verb, a noun and an adjective. Example uses: Verb: We first class them by color, then each color is classed by size. Noun: You will be the first graduating class from our new school. Adjective: The drama club gave a first class performance.
Read is not an adjective. Read is a verb and sometimes a noun Verb: You read a good book. Noun: The book was a good read.
classy
Most often, the word class is a noun. example: He teaches the fifth grade class. In the following sentence, class is an adjective: Our class project won first place. The word class describes the project. Therefore, it is an adjective.
This is my favorite class. This class is my favorite.
adjective
adjective
The word class is a verb, a noun and an adjective. Example uses: Verb: We first class them by color, then each color is classed by size. Noun: You will be the first graduating class from our new school. Adjective: The drama club gave a first class performance.
Adjective
The word reticent is an adjective.
When used in a sentence the word brainy is an adjective. The brainy boy was at the top of his class.
Advance is the adjective for the noun advancement, for example: an advance payment.Advanced is the adjective form for the verb to advance, for example: an advanced class.
No, it is not an adverb. Class is a noun, with several meanings. Class to mean "sophistication" has the adjective "classy" and the adverb form "classily."
Bored can be an adjective. For instance, "The bored students got more unruly as the class went on.