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It is an adverb because it tells when the verb occured.
It's an adverb.
No. It's a noun (He is a leading tennis coach.) or verb (He will coach at the new tennis club.)
It is an adjective phrase, because it will apply to a noun (e.g. plan, program).
The clause 'that the coach recommended' may be an adjective clause, as it begins with a relative pronoun (that) and modifies a noun such as plan, or strategy, or program.(* It might also be part of a noun clause if used as the subject of a sentence, such as That the coach recommended a new plan seemed strange.)
When it's part of the title, it needs to be capitalized. I like Coach Jennings. In the following sentence you wouldn't need to capitalize coach. My coach is Mr. Jennings.
adjective
coach
Richard Williams (Her Father) Venus' father was her coach while she was growing up. He also coached her sister Serena Williams.
Coach - 1989 Father of the Year - 5.3 was released on: USA:29 September 1992
The nouns are Mr. Gates, coach, team, Monday. There are no pronouns in your sentence.
The chickens he bought were scrawny from the lack of good feed. The athletes picked on the scrawny bookworm, at least until his father was hired as the football coach.