No, the word teacher is not an adverb.
The word teacher is a noun.
No, "teacher" is not an adverb. It is a noun referring to a person who teaches. Adverbs typically describe how, when, or where an action is performed.
no
The possessive form of the noun teacher is teacher's.Example: I put an apple on the teacher's desk.
The possessive form of the noun teacher is teacher's.
The possessive form of the singular noun teacher is teacher's.Example: I put my homework on the teacher's desk.
The possessive form for 'the classroom belonging to your teacher' is your teacher's classroom.
teacher have told us that. teacher can teach great life lessons. Life is a great Teacher.
No, teacher is a noun. It cannot modify a verb, adjective, or adverb. The possessive form (teacher's) can only modify nouns.
The Adverb is Highly and the verb is teacher
The adverb in the sentence 'the history teacher is very knowledgeable about world issues' is very.
The adverb in this sentence is "late."
The adverb is late.
Highly is the adverb.
Ironically is an adverb commonly used to convey sarcasm in a sentence.
The adverb form of "hearty" is heartily.An example sentence is: "the parents heartily agreed with the teacher about their child's behaviour".
The adverb 'always' modifies the verb corrected as to the frequency of the action.
I believe it is an adverb. For example: Students almost always dance on the desks when the teacher is out of the room. The word "almost" modifies ''always", which is another adverb.
Which sentence forms the comparing adverb correctly? A.She spoke softlier to her teacher than to her parents.B.She spoke most softly to her teacher than to her parents.C.She spoke more softly to her teacher than to her parents.D.She spoke softlliest to her teacher than to her parents.Which sentence forms the comparing adverb correctly? A.She spoke softlier to her teacher than to her parents.B.She spoke most softly to her teacher than to her parents.C.She spoke more softly to her teacher than to her parents.D.She spoke softlliest to her teacher than to her parents.Which sentence forms the comparing adverb correctly? A.She spoke softlier to her teacher than to her parents.B.She spoke most softly to her teacher than to her parents.C.She spoke more softly to her teacher than to her parents.D.She spoke softlliest to her teacher than to her parents.Which sentence forms the comparing adverb correctly? A.She spoke softlier to her teacher than to her parents.B.She spoke most softly to her teacher than to her parents.C.She spoke more softly to her teacher than to her parents.D.She spoke softlliest to her teacher than to her parents.Which sentence forms the comparing adverb correctly? A.She spoke softlier to her teacher than to her parents.B.She spoke most softly to her teacher than to her parents.C.She spoke more softly to her teacher than to her parents.D.She spoke softlliest to her teacher than to her parents.
Good can be: adjective -- She is a good teacher noun -- She wants to do good adverb -- The teacher knew him pretty good