Patiently is the adverb in Mr Morris worked patiently with the new student
patiently
Mr Morris
patiently
The word hard can be either an adjective (hard rock) or an adverb (worked hard). The adverb 'hardly' usually has an entirely different connotation.
The verb is what you are actually doing and the adverb enhances t and give is more description. Excamples of verb and adverb pairs: She ran slowly. (ran is the verb and slowly is the adverb) He played quickly. The bird flew swiftly. The computer worked miraculously.
patiently
Mr Morris
suuuuuuuuuck aaaaaaaaaaaaaa dickkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
Patiently
patiently
patiently Adverb: a word or phrase that modifies or qualifies an adjective, verb, or other adverb or a word group, expressing a relation of place, time, circumstance, manner, cause, degree, etc. (e.g., patiently, patient, then, there ).
There is no adverb form of "worked" (past tense verb or adjective).
the adverb is exhaustively, an adverb is a word that describes a verb, he worked exhaustively, this is telling us how he worked
The adverb is "hard," as it describes how he worked in clearing the land.
he worked in school as a teacher
The adverb in the sentence is outside which modifies the verb 'worked'.
An adverb clause (aka adverbial clause) modifies a verb, adjective, or adverb. It typically begins with an adverb that functions as a subordinate conjunction, as in "She has not worked since she had the accident." Here, the meaning is that she had an accident and has not worked since, or since then.