it can be used both as an adjective and a noun. take for example when describing something in terms of color, in that context sky is an adjective. but when referring to the sky as and object like you would do for clouds and stars, then it acts as a noun
The adjective form of "sky" is "skyward." This term is used to describe something that is directed or moving towards the sky or located in the sky. It is derived from the noun "sky" by adding the suffix "-ward," which indicates a direction or location.
blue sky-blue sky law
No, brother is a noun. When it is used with other nouns (brother trouble, brother officer), it is a noun adjunct, not an adjective. The related adjective "brotherly" can refer to relationships having characteristics of those between brothers, or it can refer to brotherhood (amicable and spiritual relationships) among people.
It is soaring or slowly im still looking for the answer.
Unless "the blue" is followed by a noun (e.g. the blue sky), blue is a noun, and the is an article.(e.g. the idiom into the blue, meaning parts unknown, literally the sky).
The adjective is cloudless. It describes the sky.
The adjective in the sentence "you love the blue sky" is "blue". It describes the noun "sky".
skyey
"shining" is the adjective in the sentence "the full moon is shining in the sky."
Yes
The adjective form of "sky" is "skyward." This term is used to describe something that is directed or moving towards the sky or located in the sky. It is derived from the noun "sky" by adding the suffix "-ward," which indicates a direction or location.
No. Sky is a noun, and either a noun adjunct or adjective when used with another noun (sky marshal).
blue sky-blue sky law
The adjective form of "haze" is "hazy." For example, "The sky was hazy with smoke from the forest fire."
The verb "is" in this sentence is a linking verb. It connects the subject "sky" with the adjective "gray" to describe the sky.
It can be either. The color gray is a noun. Used before a noun, it is an adjective (gray sky).
"Clear" is an adjective. "Clear" is an example of an English word that is in several categories. "Clear" is a verb, but "clear" is also, and mostly, an adjective: the clear glass, the sky is clear.