No it's a noun, adjectives are only describing words such as handsome, young, strong, yellow etc.
"Angry" is a predicate adjective describing the teacher.
adjective, it describes the noun teacher
Marxist is the proper adjective for Marxism.
[verb] ''Would you care to elaborate on your report?'' asked the teacher. ( sorry I couldn't think of one for the adjective. )
The word contemporary is both a noun and an adjective; for example:Noun: Your teacher is a contemporary of mine, we went to school together.Adjective: I like contemporary music.
My teacher says controlled is not an adjective.
"Angry" is a predicate adjective describing the teacher.
Youngest is an adjective.
This is an example of indirect speech. The speaker is reporting what someone else said, rather than quoting their exact words.
No, teacher is a noun. It cannot modify a verb, adjective, or adverb. The possessive form (teacher's) can only modify nouns.
adjective, it describes the noun teacher
Yes, the sentence does have a predicate adjective. A predicate adjective is an adjective that follows a linking verb and restates the subject. A linking verb is a verb that acts like an equal sign; the subject of the sentence is or becomes the object of the verb (TEACHER = ANGRY).
Good can be: adjective -- She is a good teacher noun -- She wants to do good adverb -- The teacher knew him pretty good
it is a adjective of course!
'Good' is an adjective. It describes the quality or characteristics of a noun.
Substitute could be an adjective or a noun. For example, "The substitute teacher" uses subtitute to describe what kind of teacher. "The substitute passed out the homework" uses substitute as a noun by itself
No, two is a number: an adjective or a noun. But the homophone 'to' is a preposition. Example: Give the completed test to the teacher. "To" is your preposition. "Teacher" is the object of the preposition.