Yes, "vocal" can be an adjective when it describes something related to the voice or speaking, such as a vocal performance or a vocal opinion.
The word "louder" is an adverb. It is used to describe the manner in which something is being done, typically in relation to volume or intensity.
"Scream" is a verb. It describes the action of making a loud, high-pitched noise with your voice.
A timorous speech is one delivered with fear, hesitation, or lack of confidence. It may be characterized by a shaky voice, nervous gestures, and a lack of conviction in the speaker's words.
The suffix in "vocal" is "-al", which changes the root word "voc" (related to voice or speech) to an adjective form, indicating that something is related to or characterized by vocal qualities.
Lovely is the adjective. It modifies the noun, which is voice.
lovely
vocal
lovely
Yes. Her voice is scratchy. (scratchy describes voice)
voices
The word curious is an adjective, along with nasal, as both modify "voice."
An adjective describes a noun or pronoun, telling us about its characteristics, or its imputed - attributed, or credited - characteristics.For example:'A tenor voice' tells us the type (tenor: adjective) of voice (voice: noun) a particular singer has.'A lyric tenor' tells us the type (lyric: adjective) of tenor voice (tenor voice: noun) a singer has.'A famous lyric tenor' tells us the singer (lyric: adjective; tenor: noun) is well-known (famous: adjective).'A wonderful lyric tenor' tells us the singer (lyric: adjective; tenor: noun) is considered by the speaker be excellent, or admirable, (wonderful: adjective).
Adjective''loud'' while ''rang'' is an adverb
mournful
No. It is the adjective form of the verb "to rasp" (to scrape, to utter in a grating voice). In this case it is applied to a "coarse" voice.
Yes, it is. It is the adverb form of the adjective vocal (by voice, or outspoken).