eighty
The adverb is inside because it explains where you like to read.
warm is the answer
That depends upon its role in the sentence. As an adverb or preposition, it is inSIDE; as a noun or adjective, it is INside.
There is no preposition. The word "inside" is an adverb, because it has no object. In the sentence "I like playing video games inside the mall" the word inside becomes a preposition, with the object mall.
The prepositional phrase is "inside the incubator" and functions as an adverb.
Not sure if it is preposition or adverb. What does it modify?
The adverb is inside. It modifies hurried, answering the question 'where'.
Artist: Lazy Boy Song: Underwear goes inside the pants
The word "inside" is an adverb when it stands alone modifying a verb. "We went inside." If it has a noun following it, it is a preposition (with an object). "We went inside the store." Inside can also be a noun (a place) and adjective (meaning private from the outside), as well as an adverb and preposition.
Yes, and if anyone argues you're ending a sentence with a preposition, they're wrong. In this case, 'inside' functions as an adverb answering the question "where is the phone ringing?" The possessive pronoun 'yours' is correctly taking the place of the noun briefcase as the subject of the sentence. The object of the linking verb 'is' is the complete noun clause 'the briefcase with the phone ringing inside'.
yes
it can be, depending on how you use it.