I would say that there is no adverb in this sentence as any means some so it wold be an adjective
The adverb in the sentence is "not," which modifies the verb "fold" by indicating the negation of the action.
Pages is not an adverb. Pages is a noun.Here is a sentence using pages: My book has 284 pages.
The subject "book" does not agree with the verb "have." It should be "has" instead of "have" to match in number. The corrected sentence is: "The book I borrowed from the library has many pages falling apart."
Library Lion has 48 pages.
The Body in the Library has 245 pages.
Guardians of the Lost Library has 28 pages.
The Swimming Pool Library has 304 pages.
Virtual Library museums pages was created in 1994.
You should be able to find math journals in a college library.
Yes, it can be. The word between is an adverb by itself, or a preposition when an object is provided (e.g. between the pages).
Bill's baby sister tore some pages of library books.
pages.
The difference being that in a traditional library, you will find physical books with actual covers and pages, and dust. In an E-library, everything is on-line, and there are no covers, pages, or dust. Plus, there's no librarian in an E-library.