This is a demonstrative adjective. (e.g. this car)It can also be a pronoun. (e.g. this is my car)An adjective asks: what kind? or which one? -- thisbicycle
The word "clean" can be an adjective when used like this: I like driving my clean car. In this case, "clean" is used to describe the car, making it an adjective.
Some adjective to describe a car are:canary yellowChevroletclunkercobalt blueCompactconservativeconvertiblecustomized
Yes. Example: He bought a fast car. Fast is an adjective describing car.
No, "when" is an adverb. If it were an adjective, you would hear such things as "I really like that when car."
I assume you mean the word "this". This can be either a demonstrative adjective or a demonstrative pronoun. In this sentence "this" is an adjective: "This car is mine." In this sentence "this" is a pronoun: "This is my car."
Yes, the verb form crashed can be used as an adjective, as when describing a vehicle such as a car.
An adjective describes an attribute of a noun. For example: a sweet sherry, a red car, etc.
It could be an adjective: The weaving car hit the truck and went off the road.
It can be. noun - Put some diesel in the truck! adjective - Our car has a diesel motor.
The word lemon can be a noun and an adjective. The word car is a noun.
The word 'you' is a pronoun, a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun (name) for the person (or persons) spoken to.An adjective is a word that describes a noun.Example: You have a new car. (the adjective 'new' describes the noun 'car')