There isn't one.
Several
The adverb is overhead.
The word 'overhead' is a noun, an adjective and an adverb.Examples:We put our coats in the overhead. (noun)This cost goes into overhead expenses. (noun)The ball flew overhead and out of sight. (adverb)
The condor flew high overhead.
Down
i gave no idea
The boy nerd booming that he kick his boyfriend, which was a totally gay.
There are no adverbs in the sentence you have submitted. The = article ball = noun flew = past tense irregular verb through = preposition of movement the = article net = noun
The jet powered-hose has burst.The jet flew overhead.
No, It is a verb. Flew is the past tense of the verb fly.
There is no limit on the number of nouns used in a sentence. (four nouns in that sentence) Examples:No nouns: They flew away. (they is a pronoun, flew is a verb, away is an adverb)One noun: The birds flew away.Seven nouns: When John went to visit his grandma, she made him some soup, sandwiches, some lemonade and for his dessert, a baked apple.
There is no preposition in that sentence. The aeroplane flew in the sky. 'In' is a preposition in this sentence
The adverb form of by means close by, or passing by, as in: "Let's run by." "The birds flew by"