It can be, when used to modify a noun (summer heat, summer weather). It is more of a noun adjunct when used to describe things typical of summer (summer clothes, summer camp).
"Last" is an adjective modifying "Summer". "Summer" is a thing, which is a noun.
Beautiful is the adjective.
Woolen clothing is hot in the summer--woolen is an adjective.
farmers
The word 'buzzing' is an adjective, a verb, and a noun. The word buzzing is the present participle of the verb 'to buzz'. The present participle is also an adjective and a gerund (verbal noun). Examples:Adjective: I hear a buzzing sound.Verb: The sun is shinning, the bees are buzzing, it's a fine summer day.Noun: That buzzing is very distracting.
"Last" is an adjective modifying "Summer". "Summer" is a thing, which is a noun.
Beautiful is the adjective.
No, the word summer is a common noun, the word last is an adjective describing the noun summer.
The word 'summer' is a verb, an adjective, and a noun.The noun 'summer' is a word for a season of the year; it names the season.
The noun 'summer' functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example:Summer is just around the corner. (subject of the sentence)In the heat that summer brings we take refuge in the mountains. (subject of the relative clause)We have the summer to finish the job. (direct object of the verb 'have')What are your plans for summer. (object of the preposition 'for)
Woolen clothing is hot in the summer--woolen is an adjective.
farmers
In this sentence, "is going to California next summer" is the complete predicate. The simple predicate, or verb, is "is going". Is is the helping verb, to is the preposition, California is the object of the preposition, summer is an adverb answering the question when, and next is an adjective modifying summer, answering which summer. Our is a possessive pronoun, it is also an adjective describing which family, and family is the simple subject.
Adjectives describe nouns. The adjective in that sentence is "grassy", and it's describing the noun "smell".
The adjective "automotive" applies to cars and similar vehicles. The adjective "automatic" means occurring without direct control, or mechanically.
In the noun phrase 'summer night' the word 'summer' is an adjective that describes the noun 'night'.The word 'summer' is also a noun, a word for one of the four seasons of the year.Both the noun 'summer' and the noun 'night' are abstract nouns, words for periods of time. Time is a concept.
In the sentence "Wow! The Spanish club traveled to Madrid, Spain this summer," the parts of speech include interjection ("Wow"), noun ("club," "Madrid," "Spain," "summer"), adjective ("Spanish"), verb ("traveled"), and preposition ("to"). The interjection expresses emotion, while the nouns serve as the subjects and objects. The adjective describes the noun, and the verb indicates the action. The preposition connects the verb to its object.