It's a noun. Nouns are people, places, or things. In this case, "bed" is the object of the propositional phrase "off the bed." Objects of prepositional phrases are always nouns or pronouns.
I can only assume the passengers were tossed about because of the defensive maneuver.
ice turned to water (melting) dissolving salt or sugar into water
Tall, towering, trembling trees tossed in the tempest.
tossed
Frustrated and embarrassed, my little sister tossed her hair and flounced out of the room, barely restraining herself from slamming the door.
There is no indirect object in the sentence, "Your friend tossed the ball to you."the noun 'ball' is the direct object of the verb 'tossed'The pronoun 'you' is the object of the preposition 'to'If the sentence were written, "Your friend tossed you the ball.", the pronoun 'you' is the indirect object of the verb 'tossed'. The noun 'ball' is still the direct object of the verb 'tossed'.
No an adjective is a describing word while toss is a verb, a doing word.
The likely word is the adverb or preposition "through" (the spelling thru is not formal English).Similar words are the sound-alike threw (tossed), or throng (crowd). Also the homophones thrown and throne (royal chair).
There is no predicate adjective in that sentence.
The word anyway is NOT a conjunction. It is called a conjunctive adverb because it can connect a clause or sentence to an earlier thought.For example: The ball may have been tossed over the fence or into a hole; anyway, it was gone.
The horses snorted with alarm and tossed their heads.
I can only assume the passengers were tossed about because of the defensive maneuver.
After robbing the batter of his homer, the outfielder tossed his glove into the air.
I tossed a ball through the portal and it came out the other side
One word that can mean tossed away is discarded. An example used in a sentence is "John discarded his refrigerator at the salvage yard after it stopped working."
Johnny not only caught the baseball his friend tossed to him, he also caught the flu.
The comedian, famous for his witty one-liners, tossed off epigram after epigram.