He traveled far.
I know that you write well.
Scared, I ran away from the haunted house.
Those are three examples of a sentence with an adverb.
An 'adjective modifying pronoun' is called a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun.
The possessive adjectives are: my, your, his, her, their, its.
Example sentences:
I can't find my keys. Your keys are in your car door.
Their house is the largest on ourstreet.
She took her dog to the vet to get itsshots.
I quickly walked. Quickly, the adverb, is modifying walk, the verb.
The dog chased the cat around the house.
nearly is the adverb of manner
As a modifier to the verb. Sentence: "The boy was running through traffic". Using the adverb "recklessly" as an adverb: "The boy was recklessly running through traffic".
Benign (harmless, inoffensive) is an adjective, not an adverb. A sentence using the adverb, benignly. "He smiled benignly at the bullies, knowing that he would have his revenge on them in a few hours."
You can't. There is no such word as "Glady".
Pages is not an adverb. Pages is a noun.Here is a sentence using pages: My book has 284 pages.
Pegasus is a mythical creature
The adverb form of greed is greedily.An example sentence using this word is: "he greedilysnatched the chocolate from his mother".
Correctly is the adverb in that sentence.
That sentence does not have an adverb.
She studied long into the night to prepare for her exam.
The adverb is "downstairs." *The clause "thinking the world was on fire" is an adverb clause using the participle thinking.
The adverb in the sentence is "where," which modifies the verb "go." It provides more information about the location of the action.