Litter is noun and a verb.
Noun: The streets are covered in litter.
Verb: The partygoers littered the streets.
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.
Noun is the only part of speech for driver.
The word appropriate has two parts of speech. It can be an adjective and a verb.
Tropical in parts of speech
The two parts of speech used as connecting words are conjunctions and prepositions. Conjunctions, such as "and," "but," and "or," connect words, phrases, or clauses. Prepositions, such as "in," "on," and "under," show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence.
Verb and noun
Noun and adjective.
This'll is a contraction of two parts of speech, this (pronoun) and will (verb).
It'll is a contraction of two parts of speech, it (pronoun) and will (verb).
We'll is a contraction of two parts of speech, we (pronoun) and (will) 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.
"You read" is two different parts of speech. You - pronoun read - verb
He'll is a contraction of two parts of speech, he (pronoun) and will (auxiliary verb).
It and is are two different parts of speech. "It" is a pronoun; "is" is a verb. "It's" is a contraction of it is.
He'll is a contraction of two parts of speech, he (pronoun) and will (auxiliary verb).
Pronoun and speech
Two