No, it is not. The word horse is a noun (an animal) and more rarely a verb.
No. Horses is a plural noun.
There is no adverb.
Then maybe
Daily is the adverb.
Irritably. As in: When spurred the horse irritably quickened its pace.
It can be either, depending on how it's being used. If it has a noun as its object, it is a preposition. The horse fell over. (adverb) The horse fell over the cliff. (preposition)
None of those words is an adverb. It could be a predicate: verb/adjective/noun.
i really dont know what it means.
It can be, but "beside" is normally a preposition. It can appear as an adverb when the object that something is "along side" is omitted (e.g. He rode a tall horse and his squire walked beside.)
yes. i am going to feed you. but, it can be used as a noun. dont buy some goat feed.
an adverb -reggieb
There are two pronouns: The personal pronoun is "I" and the word "what" (the direct object).
adverb