Usually it is an adverb; it answers the question "where?"
The master bathroom is located upstairs.
It can also be used as an adjective.
The upstairs bathroom was larger.
And, less frequently, it can be used as a noun.
The maid has not cleaned the upstairs yet.
Yes, the word 'upstairs' is a noun, an adverb, and an adjective. Examples:
noun: We're painting the upstairs.
adverb: John went upstairs to bed.
adjective: We took an upstairs room.
Follow me upstairs, please.
adverb
was is the verb. Bedroom is the noun (subject) and upstairs is the adverb
Yes. As in "I was downstairs getting ready for work when the phone rang."
Yes. Upstairs is one word.
You can say either, depending on what you mean. Usually you are asking someone to perform a sequence of actions: first, to come upstairs, and second, to see something. The way to say this is "Come upstairs and see it." But if you are saying that the purpose of coming upstairs is in order to see something, in response perhaps to the question "Why should I come upstairs?" or "Where can I see it?" then "Come upstairs to see it" is correct.
No. The verb "is" is a linking verb, which makes "upstairs" an adjective.
Yes, it indicates a location. It can also be used as a noun for an upstairs area.
was is the verb. Bedroom is the noun (subject) and upstairs is the adverb
"Upstairs" can function as both an adverb and an adjective. As an adverb, it describes the direction of movement towards a higher level. As an adjective, it describes a noun such as "the upstairs room."
Yes. As in "I was downstairs getting ready for work when the phone rang."
No there is not an upstairs to the dojo
Boobs. Upstairs outsidies.
Bellamy.
I expect to be upstairs for about an hour.
Yes, the word upstairs is an adverb. It is also an adjective and a noun.An example sentence is: "he is painting the hallway upstairs".Click here to see upstairs in a dictionary..
The Room Upstairs was created on 1987-01-31.
Upstairs is a compound word, so it is one word.
Yes. Upstairs is one word.