she "goes" walk for a daily. adverb, adjective, verb, noun
Answers
Answer:
thats easy
Explanation:
Answer:
Although many here say “morning” is an adjective, I would kindly disagree. If you open a dictionary, the only part of speech you can find of “morning” will be “noun.”
I think there are two ways to look at the problem:
To view nouns as being capable of modifying nouns
To view “morning walk” together as a single noun (or in technical terms, a complex lexeme made from two base lexemes through the process of compounding).
Despite the trickiness of the grammar, it is indeed a common phenomenon. Consider the word “shoe store,” certainly shoe is a noun, but it is used to “mortify” the word “store”. Or consider the word “swimming pool,” the word “swimming” here is a gerund (i.e. a verbal noun), but is used to “mortify” the word “pool” (p.s. the “swimming” here cannot be the present participle, otherwise the meaning of “swimming pool” will be weird). There are countless examples like this (since linguistically speaking, the N+N compounding rule is highly productive).
However, you might feel that these nouns above that “mordify” nouns are still somehow different from adjectives. These “mortifying” nouns are often determing the essense/function/quality of the nouns being mortified.
Therefore, personally I would I recommend the second way of viewing them, that is, seeing “morning walk” (or shoe store, or swimming pool, or any word like this) as a new noun (neologism) that is made from two old nouns. This is indeed the notion that most linguists adopt. In other words, I would view this process as “word formation” (more specifically “compounding”), instead of “modification”. In technical terms, people say it is a morphological process instead of a syntactic one.
Also, you may realize that in these N+N compounding processes, the newly formed words -- or more precisely “lexemes" in fact -- (say, “morning walk") are often hyponyms of the second member of the compound (here “walk"). Or to put it simply, “morning walk" is a subset of “walk", a specific kind of “walk".
Ps. If you are interested in knowing more on this topic, you may want to read about morphology (in particular compounding) and the difference between morphology and syntax.