Yes that is possible. For example:
I carefully watched the videos on the gray TV.
The word excited in that sentence is not an adverb but an adjective because it describes the subject. An adverb desrcribes an adjective, verb or another adverb.
The word hard is an adverb that describes work. There is no adjective in the sentence.
You didn't provide a sentence but the word neatly is always an adverb.
The word "loquacious" is an adjective, not a verb or adverb. It is used to describe someone who is very talkative or chatty.
It has both.The word unlikely is an adjective and the word very is an adverb modifying unlikely.
The word "local" as an adverb means relating to or characteristic of a particular place, such as "shopping locally" or "thinking locally." It emphasizes the proximity or origin of an action or event.
very is an adverb (technically an adverb clause = adverb+adjective) in this sentence, excited is an adjective that's being modified by the word very.
An adverb describes a verb, another adverb, or an adjective. "New" is an adjective.
It is an adverb. The word "well" is only an adjective when it means "not ill."
Too is the adverb in that sentence. It's modifying good, an adjective.
"Quite" is used as an adverb in the sentence. It modifies the adjective "late" by intensifying it.
In the sentence "It was quite late for a telephone call," the word "quite" is an adverb used to modify the adjective "late."