No. Harder is an Adverb.
Yes a lot is an adjective
Do you know what an adjective is? have you skipped school? yes it is.
more, most
Sometimes; It depends on the context. When you use the word "harder" as for difficulty level, then yes, tougher is a synonym for harder. If you are talking about the firmness of an object, tougher is NOT a synonym for harder. Or if you're talking about the chewyness of something.
The word tall *is* an adjective. The comparative and superlative are taller and tallest.
It can be either an adverb or an adjective: In "you need to work harder", it is an adverb. But in "I wanted to do the harder tasks first", it is an adjective.
no, adjective.
Harder is an adjective; the comparative form of hard (harder, hardest).
softer
It is an adjective. It can also be used as an ADVERB. Ex: Adjective: This couch is hard, but that one is harder. (As in "firm.") Adverb: I think our team played harder in today's game, in comparison to the last one. (As in intensity or power.)
"Harder" is an adjective. "Harder" modifies the gerundive phrase "Raking leaves" if one is willing to consider the phrase "turned out to be" as a four word composite verb. Alternatively, "harder" could be considered to be an adjective complement to the infinitive "to be". Interestingly, "harder" itself is modified by both a simple adverb, "much", and an adverbial subordinate clause," than the children had previously thought".
The word "harder" is generally used as a comparative adjective, comparing the degree of difficulty between two things. It can also be used as an adverb to modify a verb, indicating that more effort or difficulty is involved in an action.
As an adjective; try disparate. The noun form is much harder but "gap" might work.
The word hard is both an adjective (hard, harder, hardest) and an adverb. Examples:adjective: A hard surface is needed where there is heavy foot traffic.adverb: She fought hard to get the program implemented.
The three degrees (of comparison) for adjectives are Positive, Comparative and Superlative. Example: hard (positive) harder (comparative) hardest (superlative)
No, the word 'possible' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: a possible goal.The word 'possible' is occasionally used as a noun in place of the noun possibility: The possible is easy, the impossible is a bit harder.
It could be either, because it is defined by the word it modifies. It is more likely an adjective phrase. E.g. A castle with a moat is harder to attack. It appears to be an adverb in the form: "The castle was originally built with a moat" although it seems to say that the castle was built 'using' a moat rather than featuring one.