No. The word topple is a verb. It means to fall down, to knock down, or to overthrow.
No, it is not an adverb. The word dollar is a noun. There is no adverb form.
The word he is a pronoun; an adverb modifies a verb or an adverb.
Yes. An adverb can modify a verb, an adjective or another adverb.
The word not is an adverb. The word there can be an adverb. The combination "not there" is a compound adverb.The homophone phrase "they're not" includes a pronoun, a verb, and an adverb, because the adverb not has to modify an understood adjective or adverb (e.g. "They're not colorful).
No, excellent is an adjective. The adverb form is excellently.
A tree may topple if overladen with snow. A government may topple if overladen with debt.
I can give you several sentences.The enemy agent tried to topple the government.You will topple from that ladder if you don't be careful!He had a bad topple from the roof, but nothing was broken.
Topple has two syllables. Top-ple
the little kids block toppled over topple- verb means to fall over
Toppled
wobble bottle there
B. S. Topple has written: 'Corporation tax' -- subject(s): Corporations, Taxation
The area of the base is increased making it more difficult for the person to topple
collapse, tumble
viet cong
Toppled is the past tense.
You dont