Want this question answered?
No, it's a common noun.
The phrase is usually an adverb phrase since it answers the question "where." Example" He looked at the Moon. (adverb phrase)
By virtue that a meteor is a meteoroid that is burning up in the Earths atmosphere due to friction, then the answer is yes.
Meteor
meteor
up
No, it's a common noun.
Yes. The adverb everywhere is an adverb of place, and tells where she looked.
I looked it up and found that it will be on janurary 4, 2011
looked
It is an adverb. It answers the question "where?" The 4 questions an adverb answers are: Where? When? How often? To what extent?
The word met is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb meet.
The adverb in your sentence is 'thereafter'.
The odd one out is "deadly", which is an adjective. Examples: a deadly snake [adjective] She looked at me fiercely. [adverb] They looked at me knowingly. [adverb] He put the glass down carefully. [adverb]
How? When? Where? Why? To what extent? An adverb adds information about a verb, adjective, phrase or another adverb. Examples:In the sentence 'He looked carefully', looked is the verb, carefully is the adverb, adding information about the verb 'looked.'In the sentence 'She was very happy', happy is an adjective telling us about the noun (She), and very is an adverb, telling us the extent of her happiness.For more information, see 'Related links' below.
The last meteor to enter Earth's atmosphere was probably sand to pebble sized and burned up in the atmosphere within a second or two, producing a streak of light across the sky that a lucky person might have seen if they looked up at the right time.
Preposition