Yes it is because it is describing two things and that they are alike.
Same is an adjective.
the word law is an adjective and a noun in the same time
The adjective form is the same, answer. Example are 'the answer key', 'an answer expert', 'the answer desk', etc.
a negative adjective would be fat or chunky while a positive adjective meaning the same thing would be big build or heavy set.
Yes, "different" can function as an adjective. In English grammar, an adjective is a word that describes or modifies a noun or pronoun. "Different" describes how one thing is not the same as another, making it an adjective.
Same is an adjective.
Same is an adjective.
No, the word "same" is not an adverb."Same" is an adjective and a pronoun.Click here to see "same" in a dictionary.
Contemporary can be an adjective and a noun. Adjective: From the same time period/modern. Noun: Someone living at the same time.
the word law is an adjective and a noun in the same time
There is no special word to describe an adjective and a noun that both begin with the same letter. They are simply an adjective and a noun that both begin with the same letter.
Yes, it is. It is adjective form of identity and means exactly the same.
The adjective is "delusional." The verb to delude has the past participle adjective deluded, which has roughly the same meaning.
Adjective
There is an adjective in that question. An adjective describes a noun or a pronoun. In some cases, the same word can be either an adjective or an adverb.
The adjective form is the same, answer. Example are 'the answer key', 'an answer expert', 'the answer desk', etc.
Regular is an adjective, and more rarely a noun (a regular soldier, or regular patron).