Yes. Adverbs describe a verb, adjective or some times another adverb. The generally tell why, where, when or under what conditions something happened.
"The pain in his side went away". In this sentence, "away" describes where the pain went ("went" being the verb).
Adverb or adjective. As an adverb: to go away. As an adjective: an away game.
Away is the adverb.
No, it is not a preposition. The word away is an adverb.
No, it is not a preposition. "Away" is an adverb or an adjective.
No. Away is an adverb. It can be used with a conjunction but is not one.
No, the word AWAY is an adverb. It answers the question where. (the combined form "away from" is a preposition of movement)
The adverb for the word antisocial is antisocially.An example sentence is: "He always behaves antisocially when his parents are away".
away
adjective
The adverb "away" in a sentence typically answers the question "where?" or "to what place?" by indicating the direction of movement or action.
the word up used as an adverb
It is an adverb.