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Across the country
No, it is not an adverb. It is a past tense and past participle. It can form participial phrases that are adjectives (e.g. the train operated by a freight company)
The adverb is "steadily", as it modifies the verb "rode".
No, the word "train" is not an adverb.The word "train" is a verb and a noun.
"By" can be an adverb, as in "We watched the train go by." "By" can also be a preposition, as in "We stayed in a cottage by the sea."
You can drive across the US, you can take a bus across the US, you can fly across the US, you can take the train across the US.
"Overnight" can function as an adverb or an adjective.
What is the adverb in this sentence the train left promptly ay 642 p.m?
The adverb is the word "earlier."
I have been told by my freight forwarder that it means sending your container by train across country
At Amtrak.com you can book your train trip trip to any of it's destinations across the United States.
Trains were invented because there was a need for them. Trains were invented to carry heavy loads across land in the country.