No, the two words together create a compound noun. The term is more often one word, bankbook, or passbook.
The adverb is easily, as it refers to how she reads a book.
a book bank is a book used in a bank
If the sentence indicates "a book is over there" then there is an adverb. If it means "there exists a book" then it is acting as a pronoun that precedes the subject (a book).
There are no adjectives or adverbs. The word 'a' is an article, not actually an adjective. The sentence "I have recently written a biographical book", for example, would have the adverb 'recently' (when was it written) and the adjective 'biographical' (what kind of book).
No. It is an adverb.
The adverb form of "rich" is richly.An example sentence is: "the citizen was richly rewarded for stopping the bank robber".
Pages is not an adverb. Pages is a noun.Here is a sentence using pages: My book has 284 pages.
No. It can be a verb and it can be a noun.
A bank pass book number is the number on your bank account. Protect it.
Cash book with bank column is double column cash book.
No, "Jeff" is a noun, "book" is a noun, "football" is an adjective describing the noun "strategies," and "on" is a preposition. An adverb typically modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb to provide more information about how something is done.
There will be no entry in cash book when cheque is paid into bank if cash was deposited into bank then there will be entry in cash book