It can be either an adverb (finished third) or an adjective (third place).
The noun form can mean number three (the third of the month) or a fraction (one third, two thirds).
Yes
No, it is not an adverb. Bakes is a verb form (present tense, third-person singular).
No, it is not an adverb. The word dollar is a noun. There is no adverb form.
The word he is a pronoun; an adverb modifies a verb or an adverb.
Yes. An adverb can modify a verb, an adjective or another adverb.
The word not is an adverb. The word there can be an adverb. The combination "not there" is a compound adverb.The homophone phrase "they're not" includes a pronoun, a verb, and an adverb, because the adverb not has to modify an understood adjective or adverb (e.g. "They're not colorful).
The adverb relating to advantage is "advantageously" - pronounced with a stress on the third syllable.
No. Them is a plural personal pronoun (third person plural). It cannot be used as an adverb.
No, it is not an adverb. Bakes is a verb form (present tense, third-person singular).
Have/has is not an adjective or an adverb. It's a verb. (Has is the present tense, third person singular conjugation of have.)
The word is cannot be an adverb. It is one form of the verb "to be."(present tense, third person singular)
Adverb is the part of speech that is suddenly. It is told in third person.
No, it is a plural personal pronoun (third person, objective case). An adverb is a part of speech that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb and often ends in -ly.
The word is cannot be an adverb. It is one form of the verb "to be."(present tense, third person singular)
Was is a verb, a word that shows an action or a state of being. Was is the past tense of be that is used for first and third person singular subjects. An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.
No, the word "it" is a pronoun, a third person neutral-gender pronoun (nominative or objective).
Neither. The word it is a pronoun, the third-person singular (genderless).
No, it is a verb. It is the present tense, third-person singular conjugation of "to prescribe" (he, she, it prescribes - must be a person or written source). The closest related adverb is prescriptively