No.
A noun describes a person, place, thing or nameable concept. (John, Vancouver, dog, liberty)
A pronoun takes the place of a noun (I, you, me, he, she, it, him, her, them etc.)
An Adjective adds a quality to a noun or a pronoun (green, yellow, hot, cold, big, small)
Nouns that function as adjectives (nouns that describe other nouns) are called attributivenouns. Examples:
A noun that functions as an adjective to describe another noun is called an attributive noun. . Examples:
The pronouns that function as adjectives are the possessive adjectives.
A possessive adjective is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to a specific person or thing.
The possessive adjectives are: my, your, his, her, their, its.
Example: My mother will call your mother to discuss our plan.
An interrogative pronoun, which is also a relative pronoun, is placed before a noun functioning as an adjective to describe a noun is: whose.
Examples
interrogative pronoun: Whose idea was this?
relative pronoun: Marcy, whose idea it was, said she'd clean up the mess.
The demonstrative pronouns function as a adjectives when placed before a noun to describe that noun:
The demonstrative pronouns are: this, that, these, those.
Some of the indefinite pronouns function as a adjectives when placed before a noun to describe that noun:
The indefinite pronouns that can function as adjectives are: all, another, any, both, each, either, enough, few, fewer, less, little, many, more, most, much, neither, one, other, several, some, such.
The difference in function as a pronoun or an adjective is based on:
demonstrative pronoun: These are mother's favorite flowers.
adjective: These flowers are mother's favorite.
indefinite pronoun: You may have some, there is more in the kitchen.
adjective: You may have some chicken, there is more food in the kitchen.
No, a noun is a word for person, place, thing or idea.
An adjective is a word that describes a noun.
Examples:
You have a nice smile. (the adjective 'nice' describes the noun 'smile')
I would love a cup of hot tea. (the adjective 'hot' describes the noun 'tea')
The bus is late. (the adjective 'late' describes the noun 'bus' as a predicate adjective following a linking verb)
No. An adjective describes a noun or a pronoun.
Example: Tiger Woods is the most attractive man in the world.
"Attractive" is the adjective describing the noun, "man."
No. adjectives describe a noun or pronoun, so it cannot replace it.
No, it is not. It is a noun, the plural of the noun banker (a person).(the possessive forms banker's and bankers' do function like adjectives)
An adjective is a word that describes the noun, therefore gymnastics is a noun but gymnastic is an adjective.
Its a noun. The adjective of difference is different
It is both a noun and an adjective. It normally is used as a noun though.
No, it is a noun. It is the noun form of the adjective weak.
"brief" can function as an adjective, noun, or verb.
no, beef is a noun. the function of an adjective is to describe the noun. for example: BLUE chair (blue is adjective and chair is an noun.)
Examples of words that function as a noun, a verb, or an adjective are:averagebettercounterexpressglassgreenhomelikepalepresentshorttime
The noun form of the adjective functional is functionality.The word functional is the adjective form of the noun function.
The word "all" can function as an adjective, adverb, pronoun, or noun.
Noun or adjective
The word "personal" can function as both an adjective and a noun.
"Electoral" can function as both an adjective and a noun. As a noun, "electoral" refers to the process or system of electing representatives, such as in "the electoral system."
adjective
The grammatical function of an adjective is to modify or describe a noun or pronoun in a sentence. It provides more information about the noun, such as its size, color, shape, or quality. Adjectives can be used before or after the noun they modify.
The word "capital" can function as both a noun and an adjective.
The word "plum" can function as a noun or an adjective.