only is an adjective
No. The word 'only' can be an adjective, conjunction and adverb.
It is only an adverb. It modifies a describing word, an adjective or an adverb. (The adjective form is extreme.)For example:"He is extremely careful." Careful is the adjective, "extremely" is the adverb."The ball bounced extremely high." High is an adverb, extremely modifies it.
In the word 'only' for it it strengthens the word 'Serve' where the adverb is meant for
No, it is not an adverb. The word vegetation is an noun form of the verb vegetate. An adjective form is vegetative, and the adverb is vegetatively.
No. It can only be a preposition. The idiomatic form "of course" is an adverb meaning certainly or surely.
The word raw is an adjective (uncooked, or unedited). There is only an informal use as an adverb.
There is no one adverb for the word focus. You used the definite article, the, as if there is only one word that could be an adverb for that word. This is not true. Just about any adverb could describe focus, just maybe not that well.Examples:quickly focusslowly focusintently focusalmost focusedwell focusedpoorly focusedetc
Only is "le seul" (masc.), "la seule" (feminine) in French. As an adverb, is it translated by the invariable adverb "seulement".
It is never an adverb. It is always a preposition. The word "within" can be an adverb or a preposition, and the word "forthwith" (immediately) is an adverb.
It is never an adverb. It is always a preposition. The word "within" can be an adverb or a preposition, and the word "forthwith" (immediately) is an adverb.
An adverb is a word that modifies or qualifies an adjective, verb, or other adverb or a word group. The only word in the sample sentence that performs this function is "steadily".
Yes, the adverb "high" tells to what height the eagle flies. It is, however, unspecific.