Yes, it is an adverb of time. It can rarely be an noun or adjective, as well as a conjunction.
Yes. It can be an adverb or an adjective. adverb: They could have done worse. (comparative of badly) adjective: Now they were in worse trouble. (comparative of bad)
It is usually a preposition.It can be an adverb in the truncated, superfluous or idiomatic form (fell to, turned to) as seen in the still common form "came to" (awoke, revived, came to his senses).The construction is now much more common in British English.*The homophone "too" is an adverb.
Does is a verb, not an adverb.
Adverb
It can be an adverb or an adjective.
The word now is an adverb of time
The adverb "now" rhymes with how (which is also an adverb). None of the other rhyming words is an adverb.
Now is the adverb in that sentence. It tells when the dishes must be washed.
The word now is usually an adverb, and very rarely a noun (until now) or an adjective (the now generation). The idiomatic conjunction 'now that' means 'since' or 'as'.
both
The word 'now' is an adverb, a conjunction, and used informally as an adjective.Examples:Now I see what you mean. (adverb, now see)I feel more comfortable taking the trip now that I have a new car. (conjunction)Those shoes are great. They're so now! (adjective)
We should be hurrying to the store now. This is an example sentence for an adverb.
now
The word "early" is an adverb, which may also be used as an adjective (e.g. early breakfast). There was a now-obsolete adverb, earlily.
The adverb form of the adjective immediate is immediately (right now, without delay).
Yes. It can be an adverb or an adjective. adverb: They could have done worse. (comparative of badly) adjective: Now they were in worse trouble. (comparative of bad)
"Th" is not a word. Do you mean "the"? If so, I am telling you now that "the" is not an adverb. It is an article and/or an adjective, depending on how you use it.