No. It can be a singular noun (internal components), a plural noun (accomplishments), or a verb form (present tense, third person singular). As "the works" it is slang for "everything" or all possible choices.
No. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to work), and might be used as an adjective (e.g. worked land, worked dough).
No. Work is a verb, or a noun, which can be used as an adjunct (work boots, work area). It does not have an adverb form.
is the word after considered an adverb
It can be either an adverb or an adjective: In "you need to work harder", it is an adverb. But in "I wanted to do the harder tasks first", it is an adjective.
blue
Adjective
There is not adverb form for the noun merriment; but a closely related adverb is merrily. Example sentence:She sang merrily as she went about her work.
An adjective--a hard surface.An adverb--work hard.
The adverb form of the word "normal" is normally.An example sentence is: "he is normally never late for work".
Tomorrow can be used as either an adverb or a noun.Adverb = I need to work tomorrow.Noun = Tomorrow is Thursday.
The adverb form of the word "definite" is definitely.An example sentence for you is: "he was definitely at work last night".
No, it is not. Collage is a noun: an artform, or a work of art.
The word hard is an adverb that describes work. There is no adjective in the sentence.
yes feverishly is an adverb. It tells how ex: He wrote feverishly to complete is work on time. feverishly describes how he wrote.