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
They will have a ball game soon.
The adverb is overhead.
There isn't one.
Down
The adverbs are: through, very, here, and gently.The word 'flew' is the past tense of the verb 'fly'.
i gave no idea
flew
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.
no not that this: Katie kicked the kick ball so hard that it flew to the kids plate to eat
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"
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)