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very,here and gently are adverbs.
The adverbs are: through, very, here, and gently.The word 'flew' is the past tense of the verb 'fly'.
The words 'here' and 'now' are usually adverbs.
An adverb is a word that describes a verb, often modifying it to say how the action was done. In this list, gently is the only word that could modify a verb.
Adverbs are words that provide more information about verbs by indicating when, where, how, or to what extent an action occurred. Adverbs can modify verbs to specify details such as time, place, manner, or degree. Examples of adverbs that indicate when include "yesterday," "soon," and "later," while adverbs that indicate where include "here," "there," and "everywhere."
The noun in the sentence is students. The subject 'all' is an indefinite pronoun; the words 'here' and 'today' are adverbs modifying the verb 'are'.
There are many. Here are some examples: adverbs of time: today, soon, first, later, next adverbs of frequency: often, never, occasionally, seldom adverbs of place: here, there, below, down, indoors, outside adverbs of manner: gracefully, quickly, badly, sadly, carefully, quietly, happily adverbs of degree: very, quite, somewhat, too, not, extremely Note that several ending in LY are forms of an adjective. One way of forming adverbs is adding LY to the adjective form, e.g. obvious-> obviously, even->evenly.
Yes, it is, but many -LY words are NOT adverbs, or not always adverbs. If -LY is added to an existing word that is an adjective, it is almost always an adverb. Here, the adjective is half-hearted (without complete effort or involvement).
Adverbs often indicate location, such as "here," "there," and "everywhere." These words provide information about the placement of the action in a sentence.
around, everywhere, here, there
The plane flew past the building.The birds flew to the new nesting grounds.
Some adverbs of place include: here, there, far, in, underneath, away, backwards, inside, outside, upstairs, and downstairs.