If the animal with white fur has pinky or red eyes, it's called an albino.
The plural of beast is beasts.
There is no adjective in that sentence.
The word 'call' is not an adverb nor an adjective. The word 'call' is a verb. It signifies action or something that is being done. An adverb describes how the action is being done while an adjective provides a description to the subject or the reference point.
In the sentence "It was quite late for a telephone call," the word "quite" is an adverb used to modify the adjective "late."
A modifying noun?
Call your county animal shelter.
Braze
There is none. An adjective is a 'describing' word that is usually connected to a noun (in this case that would be the word "animal") and is used to give that noun a specific quality. An example: had your sentence been: 'This beautiful animal likes to swim", 'beautiful' would be the adjective, because it describes a specific quality of the animal. The word 'this' is not an adjective, although in a way it also describes what animal you mean. But we call a word like this, that, these a demonstrative pronoun.
The plural of beast is beasts.
Blue-Eyes White Dragon. Don't know why they call it that, when the body of the dragon looks blue.
Call the men with the white suits and straitjackets to come pick you up!
A describing word is called an adjective. Adjectives are used to modify or describe nouns or pronouns in a sentence.
an adjective
There is no adjective in that sentence.
There is no real answer but I prefer Call of Duty
You would call them an animal caretaker or animal handler.
We Canadians sometimes call ourselves Canucks. We are also known as The Great White North, and as The Beaver (our national animal).