The adverb in the sentence is outside, which modifies the verb 'will be eating'.
No, it is a verb. Adverbs specify where, when, to what extent, in what way, or how often.
consume
The verb to eat has the adjective forms (participles) eating and eaten. But there are no adverb forms.The synonym consume has adverb forms (consumedly, consumingly), but they relate to intensity or excess, not the act of eating.
In
The verb to eat has the adjective forms (participles) eating and eaten. But there are no adverb forms.The synonym consume has adverb forms (consumedly, consumingly), but they relate to intensity or excess, not the act of eating.
The answer to the joke 'How do you describe a window in a kitchen eating area' is a pane in the nook.
An eating disorder with binge eating is bulimia nervosa.
by eating it
No, it is an adjective. It is formed from the present participle eating, indicating that an animal could potentially kill and eat humans.
al fresco, meaning eating outdoors
the idiom to describe energetic is eating a box of sugar.
'Before' is being used as an adverb in this sentence to indicate whether the action of eating squid has occurred in the past.