No, it is a noun (a genre or classification). When used with another noun (e.g. category listings), it is functioning as a noun adjunct, rather than an adjective.
'Your' is a possessive adjective.
An is an article. Articles are placed in the adjective category.
"Every" is not a verb. It is an adjective that is used to refer to all the individual items in a specific group or category.
Miscellaneous is an adjective. It is used to describe a collection or group of different types of things that do not fit into any specific category.
The adjective in that sentence is "good". "Good" is the answer because an adjective is a descriptive word that modifies a noun. For example, if I say, "Johnny is handsome", the adjective would be "handsome" because I am describing Johnny as handsome. "A" is also an adjective. More specifically, it's an article, which falls under the "adjective" category.
The Final category is Geographic Terms.The Clue was As their boarding countries are all this adjective Liechtenstein and Uzbekistan are considered "double" thisWhat is landlocked
No, cat is a noun. Cat is not an adjective. Nouns are people, places, things, or ideas. Adjectives describe other words. Right? So cat fits in the noun category.
The category or part of speech for the word "seldom" in the sentence "You have seldom seen a more beautiful sunrise" is adverb. An adverb modifies or describes a verb, which in this case is "have seen."
The word is spelled "miscellaneous" (various, assorted).
Yes, warm is an adjective. Adjectives are modifiers that tell how many, how is it, or which one. Warm falls into the second category, since it tells you how the subject is. Ex. The cocoa is warm. I let the warm bath water soothe my aching muscles. Yes. An adjective is a describing word and warm describes the heat of something. An example of another adjective is calm.
The word 'old' is a noun as well as an adjective. The noun old is used as a category, such as the old and the new; the horse is a four year old; or a long time past, 'the days of old'. The noun form for the adjective old is oldness.
Depending on its use, just can be either an adjective or adverb. just (adj.) - fair, lawful just (adv.) - right before, exactly, only