No, it is not an adverb. A farmer is a noun, a person.
"farmer" is a noun, nouns are a person, place, thing. "farming" would be the verb form of the word farmer
Yes, it can be an adverb, or an adjective when used with a noun. The farmer wakes up early. (adverb, modifies wakes) The doctor has an early appointment. (adjective, modifies appointment)
Neither. It is a conjunction, because it connects the clause "the farmer harvested the corn" to the actual sentence, which is "he sold it as ensilage."
aaron farmer, susan farmer, Larry farmer
Prepositions lead descriptive phrases that are not sentences (clauses) by themselves. They are either adjective phrases, describing a noun, or adverbial phrases, explaining something about the action taking place.Example:The farmer was at his ranch. (adjective, showing location of the farmer)The farmer drove to his ranch. (adverb, defining where he drove)He is the president of the company. (adjective, showing president of what)He is the strongest of the workers. (adverb, describing the adjective strongest)Combined phrases:He fell on top of the stove. (adverb, of the stove modifies object "top")List of prepositionsThere are many prepositions, over 100.They include in, on, at, to, of, from, into, by, with, and about.(see list at the related link)
"After" is usually used as a preposition to indicate time, meaning something will happen following a specific point or event. For example, "I will meet you after work" means the meeting will occur following the completion of work. However, "after" can also be used as an adverb to mean later or subsequently, as in "He arrived shortly after."
1. Adverb Of Time2. Adverb Of Place3. Adverb Of Manner4. Adverb Of Degree of Quantity5. Adverb Of Frequency6. Interrogative Adverb7. Relative Adverb
The proper name of a turkey farmer is farmer, or turkey farmer.
farmer's lung
Man or woman, a farmer is called a farmer.
farmers are mint
"Ever" is an adverb.