Sacredly, Hurriedly , awkwardly , horribly, painfully, quietly, forcefully staggered.
No. It is a past participle form of a verb, as it indicates a completed action or state. Adverbs in English commonly end in -ly.
Go is a verb.
"By" can be an adverb, as in "We watched the train go by." "By" can also be a preposition, as in "We stayed in a cottage by the sea."
stagger
It can be. But wherever is usually a conjunction that connects an adverb clause. e.g. "You see them wherever you go." The rare case of wherever being an adverb would be an as exaggerated version of the word "where" - e.g. "Wherever did he go?"
No. It is a past participle form of a verb, as it indicates a completed action or state. Adverbs in English commonly end in -ly.
I bumped my forehead on the wall and staggered to get to my room.
When following the staggered closing procedure, how many people exit the building to go to the lookout area at McDonald's
The adverb is NOT, modifying the verb "go" (will go).
Staggered Crossing ended in 2007.
Staggered Crossing was created in 1997.
Not both together. Go is a verb, and back is the adverb.
The drunk staggered out of the bar. He was staggered by the revelations about his uncle. Roadblocks set up at staggered intervals help to prevent car bombings.
The adverb in the sentence is "where," which modifies the verb "go." It provides more information about the location of the action.
The wounded deer staggered on the path.
In the sentence "let's go home," "home" is functioning as an adverb modifying the verb "go," indicating the direction of the action. It is answering the question "where" we should go.
"not" is the adverb in that sentence. It modifies the verb "go".