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It is a coordinating conjunction. It connects the two sentences --- We arrived early + we could not find a seat
Coordinating conjunction.
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
it's "He arrived early at school", although i think the other one is correct too
Arrived is intransitive. Early is an adverb, not a direct object.
Islamic influences in India could be seen as early as the 7th century AD. At this time, Arab traders arrived in India.
Yes. "The early bird catches the worm." It can also be an adverb. "The bus arrived early."
during the early 1300's
The antecedent to the relative pronoun 'who' is everyone.The pronoun 'who' introduces the relative clause 'who arrived early', which gives more information about 'everyone'.
The poet writes that the doodlebugs, early German rockets, arrived over England each day at dawn.
No, the word 'early' (earlier, earliest) is an adjective and an adverb.Examples:We were able to catch an early flight. (adjective)We arrived early. (adverb)The noun form of the adjective early is earliness.