telescopic
The word 'telescope' is a noun.Example: "I don't know how to use a telescope."
No, the word telescope is not an adverb.It is a noun, adjective and a verb.The closest adverb form of the word "telescope" is telescopically.
There is no predicate adjective in that sentence because there is no linking verb. The adjectives are "powerful" and "far away".
In the sentence "In 1609, Galileo was the first person to look at the moon through a telescope," the phrase "through a telescope" is an adverbial phrase. It modifies the verb "look," indicating the manner in which Galileo observed the moon. Adjective phrases typically modify nouns, while adverb phrases modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs.
Yes, it is an adjective for the noun 'equator.' It is used to describe things about the region of the globe nearest the equator, in the tropics. It can also be used for telescope mounts that move both along and perpendicular to the movement of the Earth.
The word microscope, like other words that end in -scope, has an adjective that replaces the ending E with the suffix -IC. microscope - microscopic telescope - telescopic endoscope - endoscopic gyroscope - gyroscopic
It is a reflecting telescope
Telescope eyepieces are important of any visual telescope. It is the main part of the telescope and is what determines how the object will look like through the telescope.
Telescope.
it is a reflector telescope
The Hubble Space Telescope has a number of instruments, but the primary one is an optical telescope.
No. A Dutchman created a refractive telescope. Newton improved the telescope by creating the Reflective Telescope.