"Chary" is an adjective. It can take "of something" as a complement, and then it will follow the noun it modifies.
The chary lawyer, the chariest person, a man chary of his time
Chinthamani Ragoonatha Chary was born in 1822.
Chinthamani Ragoonatha Chary died on 1880-02-05.
Meaning "very cautious or suspicious," the term "chary" is uncommon but still useful in contemporary English. One example-sentence for it is as follows: "While he was chary of spending his own money, he felt quite unrestrained about spending others'. "
The superhero was chary about talking to the journalist, for his secret identity could be compromised.
chary
She was very shary with her friends
While I don't believe "Chary" means anything, "Cherry" means a Cherry fruit. Sorry if that was not a typo, but that was all I could think of.
the word is actually "chary" and it means cautious. Generally, a girl referring to herself as chary would be hesitant to engage in sexual acts.
part of speech
The part of speech for this particular word is a noun.
all depends on the size. Usually tall.
The part of speech for "answer" is a noun.