I think the word "emergency" is not an adjective. So, it should be corrected to "Noun". However, "emergent" is an adjective. So, the word "emergency" can also be replaced with the word "emergent".
The word emergency is a noun. When used with another noun (emergency lights, emergency room) it is a noun adjunct or attributive noun. Some dictionaries classify it as an adjective/modifier, some do not. The classification is based on whether "emergency" is an aspect or characteristic of the following noun, which would make it an adjective.
emergency
no
emergency = adjective cash = noun
no
Yes, paramedic is a noun, a word for a person who performs emergency medical care. The word paramedic is also an adjective for such things as the paramedic method or paramedic practice.
mumbling is the adjective in that sentence..
No, the word "these" is a demonstrative pronoun commonly used to indicate a certain set of items or people.
emergency = adjective cash = noun
You can use it as an adjective: "The bleeding patient was transferred to the emergency room." or you can use it as a verb: "He was bleeding all over the new carpet."
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
A word is a thing. The word 'word' is a noun.