No, it is not. It is a plural noun meaning a set of steps, or stairway.
the adverb of patient is patiently for example : John waited patiently on the stairs.
When up is used as an adverb, it isn't followed by a noun.Dave jumped up. (adverb)Dave walked up the stairs. (preposition)
The word disturb is a verb. Adverbs are words that modify verbs, or tell HOW the verb is doing something. In this example, the verb will be Bold, and the ADVERB will be caps."Johnny QUICKLY ran up the stairs."The adverb (QUICKLY) shows how Johnny ran up the stairs.
No, the word noisily is an adverb; a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Example:The kids ran noisily up the stairs to the playroom.
swiftly, she ran to catch the bus before it left the stop.
If a word ends in ly, it is an adverb. But and and are conjunctions. Not is an adverb.
yes
An adverb is a word that typically modifies a verb. An example sentence using an adverb is: "Cleo angrily stomped up the stairs after arguing with her mother."Some adverbs can also modify adjectives (e.g. very angry) or other adverbs (very angrily).
The word energetically is already an adverb.An example sentence is: "the children energetically ran down the stairs to open their presents".
The word under is a preposition, an adverb, and an adjective; for example: Preposition: We keep the step ladder under the stairs. Adverb: The stream flows under a bridge. Adjective: That's a perfect gift for an under graduate.
The second sentence is a sentence that contains both an adverb and a conjunction.
As an Adjective: The dog was timid walking up the stairs after his incident the day before. As an Adverb: The dog growled timidly at it's much larger friend who was about to steal his bone.