Yes.
According to wordsmyth.com, "only" can also be an adjective or a conjunction.
The word 'they' is a pronoun (only).
Adverb does not actually have an antonym, but it might be an adjective: an adjective only modifies nouns and pronouns; an adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb.
'Profuse' can only be used as an adjective.
Exuberant is only an adjective.
Boisterous can only be an adjective.
Yes. According to wordsmyth.com, "only" can also be an adjective or a conjunction.
Resolute can only be used as an adjective.
Antsy is in fact an adjective. It means very impatient. Antsy is only an adjective, not a noun or verb.
only is an adjective
i only have one adjective which is interesting
He can only be an adjective when you are talking about a he or something that belongs to he. he is a pronoun and nothing else
Yes, an adjective only, not a verb nor an adverb
In the sentence "Only one of us can play the guitar," there is no adjective phrase. The phrase "only one of us" functions as a noun phrase, where "only" is modifying "one." An adjective phrase typically describes a noun and would include an adjective and its modifiers.
No, adjective clauses modify nouns. The only things adjectives modify are nouns and pronouns.
receivable is a noun. The past participle is used as the only adjective: received.
There is no verb or adjective form of "passport", the word is a noun only.
An adjective can only modify a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase. It cannot modify a verb, adverb, adjective, or other part of speech...or it would not be acting as an adjective.