Yes, burnt is the past participle of the verb to burn (burns, burning, burned or burnt), which is also an adjective form. Example sentence:
She pulled a burnt photo of her family from the debris left from the fire.
The word 'burnt' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to burn (an alternate to the form 'burned'). The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:My arm was burnt by the sun on the long drive. (verb)The kids loved everything, even the burnt marshmallows. (adjective)
It depends. It is considered a verb if you "burnt" something. However, if you say, "The rug is burnt," then it is an adjective.
It can be, as in burnt toast.It is one past participle of the verb (to burn) and may be used as an adjective, as may the other past participle variant, which is burned.
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
A word is a thing. The word 'word' is a noun.
Burnt does not mean the same as the word equal.
If your toast gets burnt, you can always scrape it.
The word this is a demonstrative adjective.
The word beautiful is an adjective.
no it is not an adjective
kick is not an adjective it is a verb
The word profession is a noun. The word professional is an adjective.