Next year, I'll travel abroad.
m going to pursive my studies from abroad
We are going abroad next week.He moved abroad, Australia I believe.I need to deliver this abroad.
I have always wanted to travel abroad, but first I must get a passport.The word 'abroad' is a noun and an adverb.Example sentences:We were glad to be home after our return from abroad. (noun, object of the preposition 'from')She was excited about the opportunity to study abroad. (adverb, modifies the verb to 'study')
She snuck into the party incognito, hoping to avoid being recognized.
Abroad, in Spain, there is a zoo.
He had never been abroad and did not even have a passport.
I would like to travel abroad for the whole summer.The man wanted to travel abroad.
Yes, the word abroad is indeed an adverb.An example sentence with this word is: "I want to go abroad one day".
Word: AbroadParts of speech: AdverbDefinition: outside one's country; going around; far and wideIn a sentence: More people are going abroad for vacation.
ForeignMarineHowever, If I was writing a sentence that said "He traveled overseas", and wanted to write it differently, I might use "He traveled to a foreign land" or "He traveled across the ocean".
Psychology is the scientific study of the mind and behavior.
No, it should be, "He and Patty love to travel abroad every summer." You need the subjective form (he), and not the objective form (him) for the compound subject of the sentence.An easy way to test whether to use the subjective or objective form of a pronoun is to simplify the sentence so that the correct form is much clearer. Since you would say "He loves to travel abroad" and not "Him loves to travel abroad", you would follow the same pronoun pattern and use "He and Patty love to travel...".An even simpler form for the subject of that sentence is the subjective plural pronoun, "They love to travel abroad every summer."