Yes it's an adjective.
It can be either. The color gray is a noun. Used before a noun, it is an adjective (gray sky).
It means a colour as an adjective
No, it is an adjective. It is a form of the noun gray and the verb "to gray."
Lupus means wolf. Gray is an additional adjective.
Yes, colors are adjectives if they describe something (gray socks, a gray area). They can be nouns when they do not describe something (I like the color gray).
Big, Gray Shark
An adjective, usually. It can also be a verb, when the subject is human hair, as in "My hair is graying."The word grey is an adjective.
The verb "is" in this sentence is a linking verb. It connects the subject "sky" with the adjective "gray" to describe the sky.
Yes, the term 'gray fox' is a noun, a word for a type of mammal; a word for a thing.The noun 'gray fox' is a compound noun, a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with a meaning of its own.The compound noun 'gray fox' is made up of the noun 'fox' described by the adjective 'gray'.
Yes that is possible. For example: I carefully watched the videos on the gray TV.
"Lyart" is an adjective that describes something that is gray or grayish, often used to refer to the color of hair that has become gray with age. It can also denote a dull or drab appearance. The term is somewhat archaic and is not commonly used in contemporary language.
-adjective 1. of a color between white and black; having a neutral hue. 2. dark, dismal, or gloomy: gray skies. 3. dull, dreary, or monotonous. 4. having gray hair; gray-headed. 5. pertaining to old age; mature. 6. Informal. pertaining to, involving, or composed of older persons: gray households. 7. old or ancient. 8. indeterminate and intermediate in character: The tax audit concentrated on deductions in the gray area between purely personal and purely business expenses. ^ this guy copy and pasted this from wikitonary