The word 'day' is a noun (not an adverb), an abstract noun, a word for a concept.
All nouns for time are abstract nouns (moment, minute, century, etc.) as words for a continuing process of existence, or a specific period of that process.
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Not. The word 'cheerless' is not a noun at all. The word 'cheerless' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (a cheerless day, a cheerless room, etc.)The abstract noun form of the adjective 'cheerless' is cheerlessness.The word 'cheerless' is the adjective form of the abstract noun cheer.
The noun 'five' is a concrete noun as a word for is a concrete noun as a word for a physical count of something (for example: The apples look good. I'll take five.)The noun 'five' is an abstract noun as a word for a count of something abstract (for example: We finished the project on day five.)
The noun 'four' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical count of something (for example: The apples look good. I'll take four.)The noun 'four' is an abstract noun as a word for a count of something abstract (for example: We finished the project on day four.)
The word 'daily' is a noun form as a word for a newspaper that is published every day.The word 'daily' is the adjective and adverb form of the noun day.
No, the word morning is a noun, a word for a time of day, a word for a thing. A noun is used as the subject of a sentence or clause and the object of a verb or a preposition.An adverb is a word used to modify a verb, an adjective, another adverb, to show degree, manner, place, or time.Examples:The morning is the best time to run. (the noun 'morning' is the subject of the sentence)We run every nice morning. (the adverb 'every' is modifying the adjective 'nice')We seldom run when the morning is rainy. (the adverb 'seldom' is modifying the verb 'run')