Television, meaning "a box for viewing pictures" is a noun.
yes
"Who were all comedians" is a adjective clause (a relative clause), for example:Jack Benny, Milton Berle, Burns and Allen, Stu Erwin, and The Goldbergs, who were all comedians, were TV stars of the early 1950s.The relative clause 'who were all comedians' is a clause introduced by the relative pronoun 'who' and relates back to and further describes the subject nouns (names).See the links below for simple descriptions of adjective and adverb clauses.
The word 'TV' (traditionally capitalized) is a noun, a word for a thing. Originally, it was an acronym for the word 'television', but TV has become accepted as a noun itself. Although it is capitalized, it is a common noun, a general word for a type of audio, video receiver.The term 'TV set' is a compound noun, the combination of two words joined to form a noun with a meaning of its own.
No, the word 'western' is an adjective and a noun.The adjective 'western' describes a noun as situated in the west; directed towards or facing the west; originating in the west.The noun 'western' is is a word for a story, movie, or radio or television play about the U.S. West of the 19th century; a word for a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'western' is it. Examples:George comes from a western state. (adjective, describes 'state')My dad loves a good western. (noun, direct object of the verb 'loves')I don't know the name of the western but itstars John Wayne. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'western' in the second part of the sentence)
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.
silence is a noun. The silence made me stop and look around.silent is an adjective. He is always silent when the news is on TV.
Couch potato
Television is a noun.
The word favorite is both a noun and an adjective. Example uses:Noun: The favorite is Marty Mushkin, he's way ahead in the polls.Adjective: My favorite movie is on TV tonight.
if you mean "adjective", then no. A cartoon is a noun, because it can be something you draw OR something you watch on television.
Adjective, because off is describing the tv, a noun (thing), and comes after is, a verb (action).
Yes, because a verb is an action, something that you do, where as an adjective describes something and a noun is an object. So in the sentence "I attentively watch the TV", 'attentively' is the adjective (describing how you watch the TV), 'TV' is the noun (the only object in the sentence), and 'watch' is the verb (because this is what you're doing, watching the TV). so yes; watch is a verb.
It is a verb meaning to display.It can also be a noun meaning a demonstration or a television program for example.
Yes that is possible. For example: I carefully watched the videos on the gray TV.
The word for a TV or radio ad is "commercial" (also the adjective form of commerce).
It can be, when it means straight or verbatim (a direct approach, a direct quote). The homonym verb (to direct) means to manage, or guide, or more specifically to run the making of a film or television show.
They are used for exploring different planets in our solar system, transmitting radio, telephone, and television signals, and to tell what the weather is going to be like.