place
Well, a lot is actually two words. The word "a" is an adjective and the word lot could be an adjective the way you use it. The words "a lot" are actually informal substations for the words many and much.
The word either can be an adjective. Another word to use is whichever.
Pale is the word that you would use as an adjective.
There is an adjective in that question. An adjective describes a noun or a pronoun. In some cases, the same word can be either an adjective or an adverb.
a good adjective is ugly
the adjective is captive - the noun is captivity
An adjective describes a noun.
NO but in the sentence "Use of the word "in" as an adjective is IN these days" the IN is an adjective
The adjective form of the word credit is creditable. If you are looking for an adjective that would describe the word credit, you could use good or bad.
the area was arctic
more playful This is the comparative form of playful. Because playful has two syllables then use more. For smaller adjectives -er is added to the adjective eg big -- bigger, small -- smaller
it's a noun. Can't think of a use as adjective.