Sleet is a noun referring to freezing rain or a rain/snow mix
No, but 'snowy' is.
Since it modifies "shovel" it is an adjective.
Examples of 'weather' nouns made into adjectives:noun, wind;adjective,windynoun, rain; adjective, rainynoun, cold; adjective, coldnoun, heat; adjective, hotnoun, chill; adjective, chillynoun, snow; adjective, snowy
No, Because an adjective is a word that describes a noun and snow can't (eg. the Orange pencil case is broken.ORANGE is the adjective!!)
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.
The adjective should properly be hyphenated, as snow-capped, because the noun adjunct form is not different or unique. However, some dictionaries do list it as a single word "snowcapped" from the equally rare noun "snowcap."
Hot
nice
The adjective is spelled snowy (covered with snow, or like snow in some way).
Oppressive is an adjective that describes snow. It begins with the letter O.
Since it modifies "shovel" it is an adjective.
Examples of 'weather' nouns made into adjectives:noun, wind;adjective,windynoun, rain; adjective, rainynoun, cold; adjective, coldnoun, heat; adjective, hotnoun, chill; adjective, chillynoun, snow; adjective, snowy
very dark is the adjective here
No, the compound word 'knee-deep' is an adjective and an adverb.Examples:We trudged through the knee-deep snow. (adjective, describes the noun 'snow')We were swamped knee-deep in a barrage of complaints. (adverb, modifies the verb 'were swamped')
The word "snowy" is ordinarily an adjective meaning white, or when applied to the weather.As opposed to snow-white (a compound adjective), snowy could be considered an adverb if white is an adjective, because it acts like the adverb "very."Alternatively, you could consider "snowy white" to be a form of the compound adjective snow-white.
In usual text, snow-covered would probably be hyphenated - otherwise the sentence could be misinterpreted - consider the difference between the concept of "snow-covered mountains" and the sentence "snow covered mountains".
It can be, when it is used idiomatically, e.g turned down cold, cold sober. Otherwise it is an adjective and the adverb form is coldly.