*The noun telephone is considered a noun adjunct, not an adjective, when used with nouns.
The long telephone cord was tangled up.
The telephone ringer was set so low that I could barely hear it.
They replaced the telephone pole that had blown over.
The possessive form for "the telephone of the children" is the children's telephone.Note: The term "the telephone of the children" or "the children's telephone" is NOT a sentence, it's a noun phrase, a group of words (without a verb) based on a noun (telephone) that functions as a unit in a sentence.Example sentences:The children's telephone needs a new battery. (subject of the sentence)I bought a new battery for the children's telephone. (object of the preposition 'for')
Where may be used as a noun, adverb, or conjunction. "Where are you from?" (noun) "Where is the telephone?" (adverb) "I decide to go where no one could find me." (conjunction)
"I pay my telephone bill monthly." (pronoun, verb, possessive adjective, noun, noun, adverb)
The possessive form for "the telephone of the children" is the children's telephone.Note: The term "the telephone of the children" or "the children's telephone" is NOT a sentence, it's a noun phrase, a group of words (without a verb) based on a noun (telephone) that functions as a unit in a sentence.Example sentences:The children's telephone needs a new battery. (subject of the sentence)I bought a new battery for the children's telephone. (object of the preposition 'for')
When it's the first word in a sentence or when it's a proper noun.
laboratry telephone
how can you use the word content in noun and verb in a sentence
You are iggly.
Yes you can it is a noun and a verb depending on how you use it
The Possessive noun for the telephone of the children is telephone of the children's
its a noun
As a noun.