Link can be a noun and a verb. Hope this helps.
The word "link" can be both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to a connecting element or a URL address. As a verb, it means to join or connect things together.
The word "tropical" can function as an adjective.
The word "love" can function as a noun (e.g. "I have love for you") or a verb (e.g. "I love nature").
The word "appropriate" can function as both an adjective and a verb.
The word "trudges" is a verb.
No, a word cannot be two parts of speech at the same time. A word has a specific part of speech based on its function in a sentence, such as noun, verb, adjective, etc.
Tropical in parts of speech
The word "tropical" can function as an adjective.
The word across is actually two parts of speech. It is both a preposition (he traveled across the world) and an adverb (Jane could not get her message across).
The word link is an verb and an noun.
a pronoun
Ropnoun
The word him is a pronoun.
Ropnoun
The word him is a pronoun.
The word "word" can be a noun or a verb. As a noun, it refers to a unit of language that carries meaning. As a verb, it means to communicate in speech or writing.
The word "appropriate" can function as both an adjective and a verb.
A verb, as in to dislike something intensely, detestCould be a noun, as in pet hate