The word 'tracks' is both a verb and a noun.
Examples:
The tracks of the mice led to a broken basement window. (noun)
The railroad tracks pass through the center of town. (noun)
Sherlock tracks the clues until he finds the culprit. (verb)
Verb, noun, and adjective, but not adverb.
The word plunge can be a noun or a verb. It is not an adjective or adverb.
No. An adjective describes a noun and an adverb describes a verb.
Brief can be an adjective, a noun or a verb.
An adjective describes a verb, and an adverb describes a noun
An adverb modifies a verb. An adjective modifies a noun.
it is an adverb!:)
The verb is repeat.
verb-beatify noun-beauty adjective-beautiful adverb-beautifully
No, an adverb describes a verb or an adjective. An adjective is the word that describes a noun.
The word dead is an adjective (dead, deader, deadest), a noun (an uncountable noun), and an adverb. Examples:Adjective: The dead man was identified quickly.Noun: They arrived in the dead of the night.Adverb: He was stopped dead in his tracks.
relaxing: adjective, relax: verb and relaxation: noun. No idea for the adverb, though.