No, it is not an adverb.The idiomatic form "as far as" is a conjunction.
In the phrase "too far" the word far is usually an adverb and too is always an adverb (excessive, overly).
"Far" can be used as an adjective or an adverb. It was at the far end of the room. He traveled far.
Yes, it is almost always an adverb, but it can be an adjective (far side, far place).
Far is the adverb. It tells where (in distance) we drove.
No. The colloquial term 'far out' is an adjective. Far can be an adjective or an adverb, and out can be an adverb or (arguably) a preposition (as in She went out the door).
no far is a noun
Further is an adverb.More completely, it is the comparative of the adverb far. Examples:Did you walk far? [far is an adverb]We walked further than ever before. [further (or farther) is the comparative of far]
In the sentence "you went so far," "far" is an adverb modifying the verb "went." It describes the distance or extent of the action.
Further is an adverb.More completely, it is the comparative of the adverb far. Examples:Did you walk far? [far is an adverb]We walked further than ever before. [further (or farther) is the comparative of far]
No. Because it is an
adjective
An adverb is a modifying word, that provides additional information about a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Here are examples of one-word adverbs modifying other words:He ran quickly. (the adverb modifies the verb ran - quickly tells how he ran)The boy is extremely tired. (the adverb extremely modifies the adjective tired - he is very tired)He threw the ball too far. (the adverb too modifies the adverb far - quite different from just far)