Near can actually be an adverb, adjective, or preposition depending on the way in which it is used. For example:
Adjective: the near fields
Preposition: near the city
Adverb: Sunset was drawing near.
Interestingly, the first and second uses can be viewed as one, under the heading of "prepositional adjective". A prepositional adjective is an adjective which can take an object. In the second example above, "the city" is the object of near. Why is the near in "near the city" an adjective? Because we can also say, "nearest the city".
No. Among is a preposition. It can create adjective and adverb phrases.
Yes, it's the superlative of - close
No. It's an adverb.
"Near" is an adjective.
Depending on the use, the word near can serve as an adverb, adjective, preposition, or verb. Adverb: Come near. Adjective: in the near future Preposition: near the time Verb. The boat neared the docks.
It could be an adjective :"The neigbouring areas" or a verb (a gerund): "The suburbia neighbouring the city".
A demonstrative adjective, like all adjectives, describes a noun. In this case it is describing the noun as near (this book or these books) or far (that book or those books). So the answer to the question is c where thisis a demonstrative adjective describing the hat - saying that it is near. in a,b and d the word this is a pronoun, not an adjective.
Close - means: very near (close race) or intimate (close friend)Near - means: closely related (near neighbors) or narrow margin ( a near victory)
Just take the "ly" off. The word near can be an adjective, adverb, or preposition. When it modifies a noun, it is an adjective. Adverb: There was nearly a disaster. Adjective: The outage caused a near disaster. Adverb: He came near. He is nearly here. Adjective: There was a house in the near distance.
"Near" is an adjective.
"Near" can function as an adverb or a preposition, indicating proximity in location or time.
Yes, it can be either an adjective or an adverb, meaning near, close by.
The abstract noun form for the adjective near is nearness.
The abstract noun form for the adjective near is nearness.
Nearly (the converse of barely) is an adverb, as in nearly done or nearly fatal. It is the adverb form of the adjective near, not the adverb near.
Depending on the use, the word near can serve as an adverb, adjective, preposition, or verb. Adverb: Come near. Adjective: in the near future Preposition: near the time Verb. The boat neared the docks.
The word near (meaning nearby or closer) by itself is an adverb, although it doesn't specify "near what." If a noun follows, near is a preposition. It can also be an adjective or verb. Examples: "The boat came near." (adverb) "A bullet hit near the car." (preposition) "The end is near." (adjective) "By tomorrow, we will near our destination." (verb)
Yes, near is used as a preposition. For example:It was near midnight when they arrived. She lives near me.The word near is also a verb, an adjective, and an adverb.
It can be either. If the object is named, it is a preposition (near the wall). If there is no object, it just means "nearby" or "close." (Near can also be an adjective.)
The adjective form is near (near by, or close). Adding -LY makes it an adverb, meaning "closely" or "almost."