No. Normally is an adverb. The adjective is simply normal.
Yes. It tells how you do something. Example: I normally go to the store on Sundays.
an adjective
adjective
Dry, drier, driest. Adjective, comparative adjective, superlative adjective.
Yes, common is an adjective.
Yes it is an adjective but normally used Informally
Yes, "long-necked" is an adjective used to describe something with a neck that is long in relation to its body.
It is both a noun and an adjective. It normally is used as a noun though.
Yes. It tells how you do something. Example: I normally go to the store on Sundays.
Pakistani is the proper adjective for Pakistan.
No, it is a verb. One adjective form is "appointed."
Words ending in -ly are normally adverbs, not adjectives.
Yes, aquatic is a noun, but is normally used as an adjective.
Difficult *is* an adjective. The noun is difficulty. There is no direct adverb form (the adverb phrase 'with difficulty' is normally used).
It could be a verb but normally is an adjective... a good way to remember this is the shurly method 'the massage was soothing.'..."what was the massage?" (soothing) adjective
Sick is normally an adjective She is sick. That ride was sick! :) The sick boy stayed home.
Financial is an adjective. The adverb form is financiallyand normally modifies adjectives.