yes it is an adverb to check go to dictionary.com and type in so and it has the word, how u pronounce it, give the part of speech, and the definition.
No, hearing is a doing word so it's a verb. Any word that describes how you hear, like poorly, is an adverb.
The participles for the verb to situate are not normally used as adjectives, so there are no adverb forms. The related noun situation has the adjective form situational and the adverb situationally.
Not necessarily always but sometimes they do have so...
The word 'slow' is an adjective (slow, slower, slowest) and a verb (slow, slows, slowing, slowed).The word 'slowly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'slow', used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The word 'so' is an adverb and a conjunction. In the terms, 'so slow' or 'so slowly', the word 'so' is functioning as an adverb.Which is correct ('so slow' or 'so slowly') depends on what the term is modifying; for example:The mail delivery here is so slow. (the adjective 'slow' is the predicate nominative, describing the subject noun 'delivery'; the adverb 'so' is modifying the adjective)The cat crept so slowly that the bug never saw him. (the adverb 'so' is modifying the adverb 'slowly', which in turn is modifying the verb 'crept')
No, the word 'so' is essentially an adverb, although it can also be used as an interjection. It can never be a preposition.
both is so an adverb!
"Of" is not an adverb. Adverbs answer questions such as how?, in what way?, when?, where?, and to what extent?.
No, it can be a noun or a verb but it does not describe an action so it is not an adverb.
The word which tells something more about the verb, adverb (very,so), or adjective is called an ADVERB.
To reveal is something you do, so it is a verb. An adverb tells HOW you do something.
Got is a verb not an adjective so it doesent have an adverb form
frist that does not make sense and to figure out what a adverb isnt is to think of what a adverb is so a adverb is what somthing did for example my new dog was JUMPING and RUNNING.
An adverb describes adjectives and verbs so wait does not describe them in any way. So no.
No, healthy is an adjective. However, you can make healthy into an adverb by adding -ily. So the adverb would be "healthily."
There is no adverb form of the word puppies.This is because the word puppies is a noun.
Happily is an adverb.
Soon is the adverb, leave is a verb. So in "I leave soon" the adverb soon is modifying the verb leave.