Adjectives describe people, places or things. In the given sentence only two words describe people or places or things. The phrase "behind the garage" indicates where the truck was parked. That makes it a adverbial. The verbial "was parked" is a past perfect form of a verb. The word truck is the subject ( a simple noun) of the sentence. That leaves the words the red. Both the and red describe the subject truck. (Which truck? The red one.) Red is a common adjective describing color. The is a determiner, which arguably is a form of an adjective. But unless you are in college, the answer your teacher wants is red.
Adjectives describe people, places or things. In the given sentence only two words describe people or places or things. The phrase "behind the garage" indicates where the truck was parked. That makes it a adverbial. The verbial "was parked" is a past perfect form of a verb. The word truck is the subject ( a simple noun) of the sentence. That leaves the words the red. Both the and red describe the subject truck. (Which truck? The red one.) Red is a common adjective describing color. The is a determiner, which arguably is a form of an adjective. But unless you are in college, the answer your teacher wants is red.
Yes it can be an adjective: We walked past the parked cars.
From being parked only - no.
Garage
Yes.
no it is not an adjective
your car cannot be reposessed if it is in your own garage
In brief, if they can get to it, yes they can.
The position that can safely be used if the car is parked in a closed garage.
Well yes, But if you lock your garage then the repo officer will have to come to your door in order to get the car.
the person who parked the car
its not