No, the word few is not an adverb.
The word few is actually an adjective, noun and a pronoun.
no.
Sweet is normally a noun or adjective. It can only be an adverb when it takes the place of the actual adverb form, sweetly. This is so rare that there are few examples to be found.
Extremely, too, very, and completely are a few adverbs of degree.
Yes, it can be. The words small, smaller, or smallest can be both adjectives and adverbs. There are, however, very few uses of smallest as an adverb compared to its uses as an adjective.
There are: because, since, as a result of, is due to are just a few examples.
There are a few words that can be nouns or adverbs, though not always in the same sense."High" is an adverb and adjective, and a "high" is a high point or a state of intoxication."Low" follows the same pattern."Most" is an adverb, and "the most" is the greatest amount."Fast" is an adverb and adjective, but the noun "fast" refers to a period without eating."Straight" is an adverb and adjective, but the noun "straight" is a hand in poker.
Bug is not an adverb. It is a noun (with several meanings) and a verb (with a few meanings).
The verb 'to prosper' has a few adjective forms, including prospering and prosperous. Prosperous has an adverb form, prosperously.
Benign (harmless, inoffensive) is an adjective, not an adverb. A sentence using the adverb, benignly. "He smiled benignly at the bullies, knowing that he would have his revenge on them in a few hours."
Sweet is normally a noun or adjective. It can only be an adverb when it takes the place of the actual adverb form, sweetly. This is so rare that there are few examples to be found.
The word nowadays is an adverb. It means in the present time or era.
Exceptionally is an adverb, describing talented. Talented is an adjective. Very few word pairs are considered compound adverbs.
T is not an adverb, it's a letter in the English alphabet. Tenderly, truthfully, triumphantly, and typically are a few adverbs that begin with the letter T.
The adverb phrase is, "like a revolutionary" which modifies the verb "did dress".
Yes. Any word that ends in 'ly' is an adverb. Though, there are a few exceptions such as bully, gully, sully, belly, etc. But any 'ly' prefix that is added to the end of a verb turns the verb into an adverb.
Extremely, too, very, and completely are a few adverbs of degree.
Yes, it can be. The words small, smaller, or smallest can be both adjectives and adverbs. There are, however, very few uses of smallest as an adverb compared to its uses as an adjective.
There are: because, since, as a result of, is due to are just a few examples.