No; shall and will are auxiliary verbs. An adverb is a descriptive word that modifies a verb. Shall and will do not, and therefore cannot be adverbs.
A list of the adverbs are She,me,he,him,had,her,it,do,don't,and we.
Some adverbs (adverbs of place) tell where. Other adverbs are" adverbs of time - tell when or how long adverbs of manner - tell how adverbs of degree - tell how much
Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs.
No adverbs can describe you. The word you is a pronoun, and adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs.
No, adverbs typically modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. Adjectives describe or modify nouns and pronouns.
Adverbs can modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs. Adverbs do not modify (b) nouns.
In the phrase 'was copying,' there are no adverbs. There are no adverbs because it only has a verb in it.
adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs.
No, "quickly" is not an adverb of time. "quickly" is an adverb of MANNER; it answers the question "how?" Adverbs that answer the question "how?" or "in what manner? are adverbs of MANNER. Adverbs that answer the question "when?" or "how often? are adverbs of TIME. Adverbs that answer the question "where?" are adverbs of PLACE.
Adverbs of manner and adverbs of degree can modify other adverbs, as well as adjectives in most cases. Adverbs of degree, especially, give the quality or extent of other adverbs (e.g very quickly, too quickly, exceedingly quickly, not quickly).
Adverbs are words that describes verbs, adjective, or other adverbs.
Both very and verily are adverbs. Verily is an old-fashioned or religious word meaning `truly'. It is used to emphasize a statement or opinion. (Verily I say unto you, that one of you shall betray me.) Other V adverbs are variously, vehemently, vicariously, visually, voluntarily, and vertically.