Some can be a pronoun, adjective, or an adverb.
The word 'this' is a pronoun, an adjective, and an adverb.Examples:This is mother's favorite movie. (demonstrative pronoun)This movie is mother's favorite. (adjective)I love you this much! (adverb)Note: The pronoun 'this' takes the place of a noun. The adjective 'this' is placed before a noun to describe that noun.
The word "busy" is an adjective, applied to a noun, pronoun, or name. The adverb form is "busily".
It is either. If it modifies a noun or pronoun, it is an adjective. "That was a close game." If it modifies a verb, an adjective, or an adverb, it is an adverb. The game finished closer than we thought."
If the phrase describes (modifies) a noun or pronoun, it's an adjective phrase. If the phrase describes a verb, adjective, or adverb, it's an adverb phrase.
Some can be a pronoun, adjective, or an adverb.
The word 'this' is a pronoun, an adjective, and an adverb.Examples:This is mother's favorite movie. (demonstrative pronoun)This movie is mother's favorite. (adjective)I love you this much! (adverb)Note: The pronoun 'this' takes the place of a noun. The adjective 'this' is placed before a noun to describe that noun.
It can be either. There can be a pronoun, adjective, or adverb, and much more rarely a noun or interjection.
Yes, "especially" can function as both an adverb and an adjective. As an adverb, it modifies a verb, an adjective, another adverb, or a sentence. As an adjective, it describes a noun.
pronoun :) thanks for asking
The word 'fair' is a noun, an adjective, and an adverb (but not a pronoun).Examples:My lamb won a ribbon at the fair. (noun)They made a fair decision. (adjective)We always play fair. (adverb)
The word "all" can function as an adjective, adverb, pronoun, or noun.
The word "when" is never an adjective. It is either an adverb, conjunction, noun, or pronoun.
Most can be a noun, pronoun, adjective or adverb depending on the context.as noun: She did the most.as pronoun: Most of the answers.as adjective: I get the most money (describing the noun)as adverb: He answered the questions most truthfully (describing the verb)
No. When can be an adverb or conjunction, and more rarely a pronoun or noun.
The word "busy" is an adjective, applied to a noun, pronoun, or name. The adverb form is "busily".
The word "there" is either an adverb, a pronoun, or a noun. And arguably an adjective (e.g. that person there).