Undergraduate can be an adjective or a noun. Noun -> The undergraduate failed the course. Adjective -> The freshman failed the undergraduate course.
Safe can be an adjective. It is also a noun.
i don't now it of course will be not a stupid as u are the adjective is really man i don't know
Sourdough is the name of a type of bread. Dough is a noun not an adjective. This would be a compound word and only one word is a description of the other. Sourdough can also be a single adjective because it describes the bread (noun) An exampe of a compound adjective would be something that helps to describe the same noun like a thirty-minute course. "Thirty-minute" as the adjectives and "course" as the noun. Thirty describes the amount and minute describes the time of the noun (course).
No, it can be used as either a noun or a verb.
Undergraduate can be an adjective or a noun. Noun -> The undergraduate failed the course. Adjective -> The freshman failed the undergraduate course.
Safe can be an adjective. It is also a noun.
of course
If it passes the adjective test in the syntax, then yes--linguistically speaking of course.
Of course, deepness is a word. It is an adjective.
i don't now it of course will be not a stupid as u are the adjective is really man i don't know
"climatic" of course. Changes in climate are known as climatic changes.
yes, of course!
yellow of course
Descriptively. The currency of Australia is colourful. of course "colourful" being the adjective
bony pony
Of course not, it is an adjective. Don't be silly.