No. The word topple is a verb. It means to fall down, to knock down, or to overthrow.
No, it is not an adverb. The word dollar is a noun. There is no adverb form.
The word he is a pronoun; an adverb modifies a verb or an adverb.
The word not is an adverb. The word there can be an adverb. The combination "not there" is a compound adverb.The homophone phrase "they're not" includes a pronoun, a verb, and an adverb, because the adverb not has to modify an understood adjective or adverb (e.g. "They're not colorful).
No, excellent is an adjective. The adverb form is excellently.
adverb of black
A tree may topple if overladen with snow. A government may topple if overladen with debt.
I can give you several sentences.The enemy agent tried to topple the government.You will topple from that ladder if you don't be careful!He had a bad topple from the roof, but nothing was broken.
Topple has two syllables. Top-ple
the little kids block toppled over topple- verb means to fall over
wobble bottle there
Toppled
B. S. Topple has written: 'Corporation tax' -- subject(s): Corporations, Taxation
collapse, tumble
viet cong
You dont
They can roll, they can topple over.
Toppled is the past tense.