No. To question is a verb, and a question is a noun. The forms questioned or questionable are adjectives.
Adverb, answering the question "When?"
No, a pentagonal is an adjective, not a noun. So it is not any thing - just a description of some thing. The question is like asking if "smooth" is a pyramid.
Daily answers the question "how often" does an activity occur. When it precedes a noun, it is an adjective.
Pounds can be either a noun or a verb. The answer to your question is that it depends upon how it is used.
A derivative adjective for the noun truth is the adjective truthful. Its adverb form is truthfully.
It is difficult to understand the question. "South" is an adjective.
A very tempting question to answer. 'Tempting' is adjective for tempt.
Which is an interrogative adjective. Interrogative adjectives ask a question - which, what, whose.
We need more information to answer this question.
Adverb
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.
what kind of question is that
One adjective could be questioning. Another would be questionable (able to be questioned or examined).
A possessive noun answers the question, "who or what does it belong to", "who or what possess it", "who or what is it intended for", or "who or what is its origin".
itis an adjective that answers a question
Vietnamese is the proper adjective for Vietnam.
adjective