It may depend upon which 'till'you mean
1. To fight till death - preposition.
2. Till the time that - conjunction.....till and until are interchangable
3. To Till, as in labour by plowing - verb
4. A Till - is a drawer or a box or something in which money is kept - noun
5. As for adjectives - words such as mill-tilled or well-tilled would be appropriate
"Till" can function as both a verb and a preposition. As a verb, it means to prepare the soil for planting. As a preposition, it means up to the time of.
The word "open" can function as an adjective, adverb, verb, or noun, depending on its usage in a sentence.
It can be a verb or an adjective. As a verb: Can you OPEN this container? As an adjective: The library is OPEN till 8:00.
Adjective.
"brief" can function as an adjective, noun, or verb.
"Large" is an adjective used to describe the size of something; it is not a verb.
The word "open" can function as an adjective, adverb, verb, or noun, depending on its usage in a sentence.
It can be a verb or an adjective. As a verb: Can you OPEN this container? As an adjective: The library is OPEN till 8:00.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
Adjective.
peeked a adjective or verb
No, it is an adjective. Breathe is a verb, breathing is a verb too... but then breathable is an adjective, which makes unbreathable an adjective.
It's an adjective.
Verb: to fascinate Adjective: fascinating
Restless is an adjective. Restless is not a verb.
verb of brave?
"No" is usually an interjection or an adjective, but never a verb!
Coincide is a verb. Coincidental is the adjective.