The adverb is "soon" because it describes whensomething happened.
The adverb in the sentence is "soon", which describes when the flowers began to bloom.
As Spring neared, the flowers began to bloom.
Later. Adverbs add information about the verb, in this sentence later tells us when Anna began painting.
If you meant "where would you put a comma in this sentence" then i would say "The gardener took the hose and the shovel, and began to plant the flowers" There is no dash (-) in the sentence, its a comma (,) which is needed. I hope that helped.
The adverb clause is "When the expedition began in 1804" and, as all adverbs do, it modifies the verb. In this case, the verb is "left."
As an adverb: When the earthquake began the ground is shook powerfully.As an adjective: He likes to drive a powerfully built car.
No. Began is a verb, the past tense of to begin.
As an adverb: When the earthquake began the ground is shook powerfully.As an adjective: He likes to drive a powerfully built car.
Began is a verb. It's the past tense of begin.
The word began is the past tense for the verb to begin. There is an adjective (the past participle begun) but no adverb form. The verb began can be modified by adverbs such as slowly, suddenly, abruptly, or inauspiciously.
Here we go: 1. The moonlight died down as the night hid away while the rainstorm started to clear and the sun began to rise.
Yes. Like an adverb, it tells "when" an action occurred or a condition existed.
the verb in this sentence is began