I think it is an adjective, because it describes when you are doing something or not doing something.
Adjective ---> I shall never see you again.
Never is describing when you will see something again.
"No" is usually an interjection or an adjective, but never a verb!
No it can be used as a noun or a verb. Never an adjective.
No, it is not. It is a past tense linking verb or auxiliary verb. Was is a past tense conjugation of "to be." It is never used as an adjective.
Hundredth is an adjective or a noun, depending on its use. It is never a verb.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
Adverb. It modifies the verb. If something will "never" happen, it describes when something happen: never.
The word love is a verb and a noun. Example:Love is beautiful. (noun)I love you. (verb)Love is never an adjective, unless you say something is lovely.
No. It is used most often as a verb, sometimes as a noun, but it is never an adjective.(Adjectives related to need include needy and the past participle needed.)
The word very is usually an adverb. In some rare uses it is an adjective (e.g. the very thought of leaving, the very end). But it is never a verb.
Adjective.
The word moral is not a verb. It can be a noun, as in, the moral of the story is to never trust strangers, or it can be an adjective, as in Pastor Lewis is a very moral person, but it is not a verb. Moralize is a verb.
'To make' is a verb. 'Make' can also be a noun ('What is the make of your new car?') 'Make' can never be an adjective though.