"Ice" is a noun, which is a person, place or thing. "Iced" and "icy" are adjectives.
no, It is considered as Noun.
The verb form can be an adjective (e.g. drifting ice, drifting debris).
Ice is a noun (Put ice on your swollen knee) and a verb (Ice your swollen knee).
One, giant, and two (adjectives) Rock, pieces, and ice (nouns)
If you mean "like" as in, "I like ice cream," then the adjective form would be "liked." As in "He is a well liked man."
Ice is used as an adjective to describe the storm.
The word cherry is a noun that can be used as an adjective. I had an ice cream sundae with a cherry on top. Cherry pie is his favorite.
"Frozen" or "ice-cold" as an adjective and "ice creams" as a noun are English equivalents of the Italian word gelati. Context makes clear which translation suits the masculine plural word. The pronunciation will be "djey-LA-tee" in Pisan Italian.
No, icy is an adjective, as it adds information to a noun, eg: the icy road, or the icy pond. The noun form is iciness or ice
No. Packed isn't an adverb. It's a verb. And it can be used as an adjective.
The elephant ate the ice cream off the cage floor at the zoo.
The adjective for the noun ice is icy. Its related form is the adverb icily (which is also used metaphorically to mean in an emotionally distant or unfriendly manner).