yes mostly no
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.
The Gleaner News has online articles that are published on a daily basis, according to various websites. Assuming that this is the same as The Henderson Gleaner, the daily newspaper in Henderson, Kentucky, it is published on every day except for Mondays.
The Patriot Ledger is an American newspaper published in Quincy, Massachusetts and published on a daily basis. The Patriot Ledger often prints regular papers every Monday through Friday and a special edition every Saturday.
A daily newspaper (such as the Daily Mail), is published every day of the week, and sometimes even has a special Sunday edition (such as the Mail on Sunday). A weekly newspaper, however, appears only once a week. An example of this would be the Essex County Standard, traditionally published on Fridays.
In Bangladesh there are many newspapers and each one may be dedicated to one topic. For instance, a sports newspaper, a fashion newspaper, a financial and shares newspaper and a daily news newspaper. Different classes of people read different types of daily and world newspapers and there are dozens published every day.
The word, "daily," can be a noun, adjective, or adverb. As an adjective it describes a time period and is of the "adjective order," "frequency."Yes, there are adjectives of frequency! Although a rule of thumb states that adverbs (not adjectives) answer the questions, "how, when, or where," what ultimately determines a modifier's linguistic nomenclature in a sentence is whether it describes a noun, pronoun, or verb.Adjective: In the morning I read an English-language daily newspaper.In that sentence the word, daily, describes the noun, newspaper, so is classed as an adjective. Here are ways to use daily as a noun and an adverb in two sentences of similar meanings:Noun: The newspaper I read in the morning is an English-language daily.Adverb: In the morning daily I read an English-language newspaper.It is important to remember that language is living and word order is not fixed. Using daily as an adjective you also could say, In the morning I read a daily English-language newspaper, and be equally correct. Word-order choice hinges first on clarity of meaning, and then on your chosen emphases.
The Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA) which published the NEA Crossword Daily Puzzle is no longer publishing the crossword puzzles.
to tell you good reports every day and every morning
The Cool Courier! You wanted a "cool" name, didn't you? :) Just kidding. Try some of these suffixes if you like: * Annual (if your newspaper comes out every year) * Book * Bugle * Chronicles * Courier * Daily (if your newspaper comes out every day) * Dose * Doser * Feed * Feeder * Feeds * Informer * Journal * Journey * Life * Messenger * Monthly (if your newspaper comes out every month) * News * Newsflash * Newsflasher * Newsletter * Newspaper * Series * Times * Weekly (if your newspaper comes out every week) * Yearly (if your newspaper comes out every year)
The word 'daily' is the adjective form of the abstract noun day.A word for any period of time (moment, day, century, etc.) is a word for a concept.The noun 'daily' is a concrete noun as a word for a newspaper published every weekday.
The Club Penguin Newspaper comes out daily every Thursday.
In the term 'daily mail', the word 'daily' is an adjective describing the noun 'mail'.The term 'daily mail' functions as a compound, common noun, a general term for the postal service delivery that occurs every day.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example the Daily Mail newspaper published in London or the Charleston Daily Mail published in Charleston, WV.