Yes. Liquid is a noun and an adjective. (There is also a negative, illiquid, for some uses.)
either adjective ('the ground is wet') or verb ('the dog wet the carpet')
No, it is not. Drop can be a noun (a small amount of liquid, or a fall) or a verb (to allow to fall).
It can be, meaning without water, or arid, or not damp. Dry is also a verb (to dry) meaning to remove water or other liquid, or to dehydrate.
Tepid means liquid that is slightly warm or lukewarm. It also could mean to show little enthusiasm in something. Tepid is also an adjective.
The word steep can be an adjective and a verb. The adjective form means to be of a near vertical gradient. The verb form means to soak an item in a liquid such as water to add or remove components to or from it.
Liquid is an adjective. Adjectives describe nouns.
The word liquid is both a noun and its own adjective. Another adjective form is the negative, illiquid, meaning not convertable to cash.
The comparative adjective of liquid is more fluid and superlative adjective is most fluid.
Yes, "liquid" can be a noun as well as an adjective, but not a verb.
Liquid can be a noun and an adjective. Noun: A flowing substance. Adjective: Flowing freely like water.
Drench can be both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to a large quantity of liquid that soaks something completely. As an adjective, it describes something that is soaked or saturated with liquid.
No, "molten" is an adjective that describes something that has been melted from a solid to a liquid state due to high heat.
The word "liquid" can function as a noun, referring to a substance that flows easily, or as an adjective to describe something as having the qualities of a liquid.
either adjective ('the ground is wet') or verb ('the dog wet the carpet')
No, "proactive" is not a liquid; it is an adjective that describes taking initiative or taking action to prevent problems rather than waiting for them to occur.
No, "leaky" is an adjective that describes something that is allowing liquid or gas to escape through a hole or crack. An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb, but "leaky" is used to describe a noun.
Juicy is an adjective. A proper noun is the name of something like a person or a country e.g. Mary or Germany.