No it's a noun.
The word "teacher" is a noun. The word "teach" is a verb.
The word 'teacher' is a noun. 'Teach' is a verb. I am able to teach, therefore I am a teacher.
The verb in the sentence is "is," which is a form of the verb "to be."
A word that shows actions is Verb A verb is a doing word. Examples I went to the shop I played on my PS3 I sang to my teacher hllo
No the word 'is' is a verb, the third person singular present of the verb to be. The verb 'is' functions as a main verb or an auxiliary verb.The singular present forms of the verb to be are:first person, I amsecond person, you arethird person, he - she - it isA noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.Example functions:Who is your teacher?The verb 'is' is the main verb.The word 'teacher' is a noun, a word for a person.The beach is getting crowded.The verb 'is' is an auxiliary verb to the main verb 'getting'.The word 'beach' is a noun, a word for a place.The bird is building a nest in the tree.The word 'is' is an auxiliary verb to the main verb 'building'.The words 'bird', 'nest', and 'tree' are nouns, words for things.
For a verb to be a linking verb, the direct object of the verb will be another word for or another form of the subject of the verb. A linking verb acts as an equals sign; 'Mary is my sister.' (Mary=sister); or 'Mary's feet got wet.' (feet->wet). Examples: The teacher appeared tired. (teacher=tired) The teacher appeared in the doorway. (not a linking verb)
no, it's a noun. teaching is the verb (action). no, it's a noun. teaching is the verb (action). no, it's a noun. teaching is the verb (action).
The verb in that sentence is "likes." It is the action word that shows what the teacher enjoys doing.
The word talk is both a noun and a verb; for example: Noun: The talk is that you got a raise. Verb: You can talk to my teacher about the class trip.
No, there is no specific adjective that describes killing a teacher. The word for someone who kills a teacher is a murderer (noun), the crime is murder (noun), to kill a teacher is murder (verb). But don't despair, there is a word that could come in handy, verbicide: the willful distortion or depreciation of the original meaning of a word.
There is no Hebrew word for "is" or any form of the verb "to be" in the present tense in Hebrew. It is just implied from context.She is a teacher = hee morah (היא מורה) which literally means "she teacher".
Yes, the word pleased can be used as a verb.As in "he pleased his teacher".Other verbs are please, pleases and pleasing.