Yes' the word excellent is an adjective.
The adjective form is the word "national".
Yes, it is an adjective.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
No, an adjective is a describing word.
The word "local" as an adverb means relating to or characteristic of a particular place, such as "shopping locally" or "thinking locally." It emphasizes the proximity or origin of an action or event.
It can be either. If it modifies a noun like "newspaper", as in, "I get a daily newspaper." Then it's an adjective that tells what kind of "newspaper" If it modifies a verb, adjective or another adverb then it's an adverb. In the sentence, "I walk daily." The word "daily" is an adverb that tells more about the action "walk"
No, "newspaper" is a noun that refers to a publication containing news, opinions, advertisements, and other information. An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, adjective, or other adverb to convey information about time, manner, place, or degree.
The word 'daily' is a noun form as a word for a newspaper that is published every day.The word 'daily' is the adjective and adverb form of the noun day.
The daily newspaper became a weekly, then a monthly, then it wasn't a paper at all, it was a magazine.
The word, "daily," can be a noun, adjective, or adverb. As an adjective it describes a time period and is of the "adjective order," "frequency."Yes, there are adjectives of frequency! Although a rule of thumb states that adverbs (not adjectives) answer the questions, "how, when, or where," what ultimately determines a modifier's linguistic nomenclature in a sentence is whether it describes a noun, pronoun, or verb.Adjective: In the morning I read an English-language daily newspaper.In that sentence the word, daily, describes the noun, newspaper, so is classed as an adjective. Here are ways to use daily as a noun and an adverb in two sentences of similar meanings:Noun: The newspaper I read in the morning is an English-language daily.Adverb: In the morning daily I read an English-language newspaper.It is important to remember that language is living and word order is not fixed. Using daily as an adjective you also could say, In the morning I read a daily English-language newspaper, and be equally correct. Word-order choice hinges first on clarity of meaning, and then on your chosen emphases.
The word 'these' is not an adjective. An adjective is something that describes a noun.
Glad.
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
A word is a thing. The word 'word' is a noun.
no it is not an adjective
The word this is a demonstrative adjective.