Taxes will only be slightly increased so that the city can build a new stadium.
The old stadium is crumbling.
No. Stadium is a noun, the object of the preposition "to." However, the prepositional phrase "to the stadium" is an adverb phrase.
I got lost in the stadium. The stadium is just two stadia from here. I can't believe how many seats the proposed stadium will have!
The word 'stadium' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a type of building, a word for a thing. A noun functions in a sentence as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Example: My dad is taking me to a stadium to watch a football game.
The overzealous fan was kicked out of the stadium
I went to a shop nearby to a football stadium.
The stadium roared to life with cheers.During the zombie outbreak, people were evacuated to the local stadium. Before it was overrun.
Depends on weather in the sentence it is naming a specific stadium like: The Green Bay Stadium is open tonight. it's proper but if it is: My family is going to the stadium down the road from my house. Then it is common. hope this helps
The crowd in the stadium was being ludicrous to the goal.
while driving to Arrowhead Stadium last night
It is a metaphor I believe.
I went to the cool stadium to see the Olympics play and it was cool.
He was asked to leave the stadium because of his loud, drunken, boorish behavior.