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No, it is an adjective. The rarely-used adverb is rockily.
No, the word "light" can be used as an adjective or a noun. "lightly" can be used as an adverb.
It is an adjective. The less-used adverb form is dizzily.
No, it is not. It is an adjective form of the noun wind. The adverb form (windily) is rarely used.
Quickly is an adverb that could be used with moved, i.e. "The boy moved quickly through the crowd."
No. The words "were stationed" are the past continuous tense (plural or you) forthe verb "to station." It cannot be used as an adverb.
No, the word "from" is a preposition. It cannot be used as an adverb.
No. Paintings is a plural noun. It cannot be used as an adverb.
No, it can be a pronoun, adjective, or interjection.It cannot be used as an adverb, as wherever can.
No, it cannot. The word lone is an adjective. The adverb form is "alone."
Not actually. The abbreviation i.e. is the Latin term "id est" (that is). Although often classified as an adverb, it is used like a conjunction to mean "in other words" and cannot stand by itself.
No. Them is a plural personal pronoun (third person plural). It cannot be used as an adverb.
No. The word there is a pronoun or adverb. It cannot be used as a conjunction.
The negative adverb "cannot" and it's contraction "can't" are used to indicate an action not able to be done. The separate words "can not" are never used together in this usage. (also, if something is merely not allowed, "may not" is used instead)
No, it cannot be an adverb. It is a noun, but can be used as a noun adjunct with other nouns, as in the term portion control.
No, "no" is not a conjunction. "No" is an adverb that is commonly used to give a negative response or to negate a statement.
No, "lastly" is an adverb, not a preposition. It is used to introduce the final point or item in a list or sequence.