Television is a noun.
Noun
Noun
Adjective
Proper noun
verb
proper noun
verb
It is an adverb. Obviously.
Growl can be a noun or a verb. As a noun: That dog has a vicious growl. As a verb: My dog growls at the animals on the television.
The elderly woman is on a fixed income. Here, fixed is an adjective. He fixed the broken television. Here, fixed is a verb.
The topic that the speaker has chosen
adverb
Radio and television station markets One is part of New England and the other is not Accents used in speech
It is an adverb. Obviously.
Adjective, because off is describing the tv, a noun (thing), and comes after is, a verb (action).
Television speech are visual while radio speech are audio
Growl can be a noun or a verb. As a noun: That dog has a vicious growl. As a verb: My dog growls at the animals on the television.
That is the past tense of the verb to nod. "He nodded his head while watching TV late at night".
The elderly woman is on a fixed income. Here, fixed is an adjective. He fixed the broken television. Here, fixed is a verb.
Depending on the context, struggle can be a noun or a verb. As a noun: Raising a child can be an emotional struggle. As a verb: He struggles to get the oversized TV into the too-small trunk.
Depending on the context, struggle can be a noun or a verb. As a noun: Raising a child can be an emotional struggle. As a verb: He struggles to get the oversized TV into the too-small trunk.
A noun
The topic that the speaker has chosen
part of speech