Everywhere I am there are flowers. Everywhere I am going there was a police informant trailing me.
After breaking up with my ex, she seemed to turn up everywhere I went.
No. While "everywhere" is a relative adverb here, replacing the more formal "in every place that", the sentence is not correct due to the lack of punctuation. It would be better written as You can search everywhere I live; you can trace everywhere I am.Even better would be to separate it as two sentences.
Yes. The adverb everywhere is an adverb of place, and tells where she looked.
The two sentences are grammatically correct.
you just did when you say that sentence also in this sentence. Widespread is everywhere, and you can put it on anything.
Decomposers are everywhere!
it is impossible that a we can be everywhere at once.
When I entered the kitchen there was food everywhere!
the placard have been posted everywhere.
Fraud is illegal almost everywhere.
The twins are inseparable they go everywhere together!
Fragments or a sentence