Adverbs of place indicate the location of an action, or a status.
For example:
His youth was spent abroad.
He opened the box and looked inside.
The bedrooms are located upstairs.
An adverb tells how much. The adverb tells how fast or how slow you ran.
"With a stutter" as it tells how he spoke and modifies the verb "spoke." An adverb phrase modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb. An adverb tells how, when, or where about a verb. "Stutter" tells how about the verb "spoke."
It is an adverb phrase (tells where).
An adverb tells more about a verb. An adverb quite often ends in the letters, "ly". Example: The girl ran quickly. "Quickly" is the adverb, and you can see that it tells more about the verb, "ran".
An adverb tells when or where. Sometimes a prepositional phrase acts as an adverb.
It is an adverb. It tells how something is being done.
No. Happily is an adverb. If the word tells "how", it's an adverb.
It is an adverb of manner. It tells how something was done.
It's not an adverb at all, but an adjective! "You look cheerful!"The adverbial form is "cheerfully", or, to be colourful, "cheerily". "He grinned cheerfully at the crowd."Cheerfully is an adverb of manner as it tells us how the verb is done or happens.
An adverb.
The adverb of the word available is availably. This adverb tells us when something will or is able to happen.
To reveal is something you do, so it is a verb. An adverb tells HOW you do something.