There is no adverb in the sentence, "Fred brought home a baby tiger for Helen to help." If you need an adverb, then you could write "Fred *carefully* brought home a baby tiger for Helen to help."
yes
There is but one tiger species, but six recognized subspecies.
There are no white Bengals in the wild today, all are in zoos.
There is actually 6 breeds of tigers still in existence today: (Royal) Bengal Tiger Indochinese Tiger Malayan Tiger Sumatran Tiger Siberian Tiger South China Tiger There are 3 extinct breeds of tigers: Balinese Tiger Javan Tiger Caspian (Persian) Tiger
People that tear down their environment making an decrease for tiger's population.
Today can be used as both a noun and an adverb. Noun: Today is Monday. Adverb: I will walk five miles today.
"Today" is the adverb. It modifies the verb "arrived". Today is the adverb because it is describing "when".
'Today' is the adverb. 'Today' is telling 'when' which is modifying the verb 'receive'.
The Siberian tiger is the biggest species if tiger today.
Today is either an adverb or a noun, but not an adjective. Examples:I'll finish the job today. (Adverb)We spoke to them today. (Adverb)Today is a fine day. (Noun)The prices of today are reasonable. (Noun)
The word 'today' functions as an adverb and a noun. Examples: Adverb: The auditor is expected today. Noun: Today is the day of the audit. No.
The adverb in the sentence, Today Julia is preparing the soil for her corn seeds and young tomato plants is today. An adverb states how, what, when, or where.
Yes, today is an adverb. An adverb shows when, where, how often, how long, to that extent, how much, or why. Today answers the question "when."It can also be a noun in some uses.Yes, it is. It is also a noun and an adjective depending how it is used.
Today is an adverb when it describes "when". I will go home today. Today modifies the verb "go" by telling "when" you go. Another opinion: Today is a noun, not an adverb, nor an adjective. What it counts is its primary function in a sentence, not depending on how it is used. According to Babylon, today is : today n. current day. An adverb modifies a verb, and an adjective qualifies a noun. Today is always today anytime of the current day, so it is always a noun.
no
today
The adverb in the sentence is "today". It describes when the action of reading the comics took place.