Adjectives ask these questions: which one, what kind, how many, how much, whose.
Adverbs answer the questions: How? Why? When? To what extent? How much?
To What? How? When? Where?
adverbs answer the questions -how ,why,when and where.ie,adverb of manner,adverb of purpose and reason,adverb of time and adverb of place.
The seven questions that adverbs answer are...1. how2. how much3. when4. where5. why6. to what extent7. under what conditions
The 4 general questions are When? (or how frequently) Where? How? (in what manner?) To what extent? This creates the 4 general types of adverbs : time, place, manner, and degree.
When, To what extent, How much, how, why
As part of an interrogative sentence, adverbs may ask the questions that they usually answer. These are how, when, where, how many, how much, and to what degree. In "where did they go?" the word where is an adverb, as the related word would be in the question "did they go anywhere?"
Yes, they are. And they are three of the questions answered by adverbs. They can also be used as subordinating conjunctions, and much more rarely as nouns.
"Of" is not an adverb. Adverbs answer questions such as how?, in what way?, when?, where?, and to what extent?.
An adverb answers one of these 4 questions: WHEN? (or how often) WHERE? HOW? (in what manner) TO WHAT EXTENT? (how much, to what degree) They are called adverbs of time, place, manner, and degree.
Adverbs, typically ending in "ly", most commonly answer the following six questions: 1. Who? 2. What? 3. When? 4. Where? 5. Why? 6. How?Who, What, Where, When, Why, and How.