No. The word students is a plural noun. It cannot be an adverb.
The adverb is late.
The adverb is late.
"Late" is the adverb in the sentence. It describes the action of the students arriving late to their English class.
The adverb form is liberally. He gave money liberally to all the students in the class.
The adverb in the sentence is "late," modifying the verb "arrived." It describes the manner in which the students arrived.
It is about 12 o'clock. There are about 20 students in the class.
I believe it is an adverb. For example: Students almost always dance on the desks when the teacher is out of the room. The word "almost" modifies ''always", which is another adverb.
No, "sticks" is not an adverb at all.The word "sticks" is a noun and a verb.
adverb
Adverbs normally end in '-ly' so if we added '-ly' to correct, the adverb for correct is correctly.
No, "punished" is not an adverb. It is a verb in past tense form. An adverb is a word that modifies or describes a verb, adjective, or another adverb. Ex: "He was punished severely." In this sentence, "severely" is the adverb modifying the verb "punished."
The science teacher alerted the students, then, continued to demostrate the experiment.