Yes, "new" is an adjective.
New car, new shoes, new house.
"That's yesterday's news..." uses 'yesterday' to qualify the pronoun 'news'.
No, the noun "news" is functioning as an attributive noun in the noun phrase "news article".In the phrase "news article", the noun "news" is describing the noun "article", not showing ownership or possession. An attributive noun (also called a noun adjunct) is a noun functioning as an adjective, describing another noun.
silence is a noun. The silence made me stop and look around.silent is an adjective. He is always silent when the news is on TV.
adjective phrase describing the noun that follows it.
The word nightly can be used as an adjective or an adverb. It means occurring each night. Examples: his nightly walk, the nightly news (adjective) he visits her nightly (adverb)
Umm...there isnt really a new part of speech... There are only eight and they are: the verb the noun the pronoun the adjective the adverb the preposition the conjunction and the interjection
The most likely way to make the noun audiophile into an adjective would be to use it as it is, for example, our publication gives the latest audiophile news.
Marxist is the proper adjective for Marxism.
When i was watching the news, it said there was a horrible monsoon in southeast Asia this past Tuesday.
No, it's an adjective. The adverb is "newly." Another older adverb is "anew."
Yes, it is, although it can also be an adverb or noun (the latest meaning the most recent news or information). Latest is the superlative form of the adjective/adverb "late."
No, the phrase 'good news' is a noun phrasemade up of the adjective 'good' describing the common noun 'news'.