Yes, the word animal is considered an adjective (rather than a noun adjunct) in terms such as animal welfare and animal fat.
Creatural
Yes its a noun but it can be used as an adjective too.
"Simian" means "monkey-like".
angry, hungry, nice, hairy,red all things like that
Animals that walk on two feet, like humans and birds, are called bipeds. The noun is biped. The adjective is bipedal.
It can be used as an adjective -- a rescued animal.
five-footed animal is an adjective ending in -ed.
Yes, it is an adjective. The adjective equine means of or about a horse or some very similar animal.
The adjective form of zeal is zealous. PETA is zealous about animal rights.
Yes, grumpy is an adjective, because it is describing something (animal) or someone.
deer.
Creatural
yesYes; for example: That was a colossal animal.
Dog is a noun. It is an animal
kind, loving, delightful
There is none. An adjective is a 'describing' word that is usually connected to a noun (in this case that would be the word "animal") and is used to give that noun a specific quality. An example: had your sentence been: 'This beautiful animal likes to swim", 'beautiful' would be the adjective, because it describes a specific quality of the animal. The word 'this' is not an adjective, although in a way it also describes what animal you mean. But we call a word like this, that, these a demonstrative pronoun.
No, the word 'animal' is a noun (animal, animals) and an adjective (animal).The noun 'animal' is a word for a living creature that sustains itself on organic matter and is capable of mobility; a word for a thing.The adjective 'animal' describes a noun as of or like an animal.Examples:The footprints of an animal could be seen around the spilled trash container. (noun)The first clothing devised by humans were made from animal skins. (adjective)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: We saw the footprints of an animal. Itmust have spilled the trash. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'animal' in the second sentence)