Yes
No, it is not an adverb. But it is a prepositional phrase that can be an adverb if it refers to a verb (e.g. he found a coin in the box).
There is no adverb form for the verb climb, or climbed. You would need to use an adverbial prepositional phrase to indicate "in a climbing fashion."
Phrase
It is part of a participle phrase (starting with made). The word "of" would either be an adverb or the preposition introducing a prepositional phrase (e.g. made up of rock).
"More quickly" is an adverbial phrase. Quickly is an adverb.
No. But the prepositional phrase "in it" is an adverb phrase.
No, "along" is an adverb, not a prepositional phrase.
No. A prepositional phrase contains a preposition and its object. Often is an adverb.
A prepositional phrase acts as an adjective or adverb.As an adjective, the prepositional phrase will answer the question Which one?The shoe on the floor belongs to you.As an adverb, a prepositional phrase will answer questions such as How? When? Where?After class, John asked me on a date.
Yes. It is a prepositional phrase, used as an adverb.
An adjective prepositional phrase describes a noun or pronoun, answering "which one?" An adverb prepositional phrase usually modifies the verb in a sentence, but it can also modify an adjective or adverb. It answers when, where, how, or to what degree. The man in the car waved. (in the car, adjective, modifies man - which man?) He jumped into the car. (into the car, adverb, modifies jumped - where did he jump?)
No, "in the summer" would be a prepositional phrase.
A prepositional phrase is a phrase that is headed off by a preposition, and can often act as an adverbial phrase if it answers the questions How?, Where? or When?.An adverbial phrase is a phrase that acts as an adverb (something that modifies a verb, adverb, or adjective); often they may appear in form of a prepositional phrase, but are not necessarily limited to prepositional phrases. For example:1.My parents come to visit me several times a week: several times a week is an adverbial phrase telling me when, and it does not consist of a prepositional phrase.2.My parents stayed in town for several weeks: for several weeks is an adverbial phrase also telling me when, but this time employing a prepositional phrase to deliver this adverb. In town is also and adverbial phrase answering where, and employing a prepositional phrase to convey this information.
Yes, "of the town" is a prepositional phrase. A prepositional phrase typically consists of a preposition (in this case, "of") and its object ("town"). It functions as an adjective or adverb in a sentence.
prepositional phrase
An adverb phrase adds information about a verb, adjective, or adverb. It is used to tell when, where, how, or to what extent about the word it modifies:Jack put the chicken in it's cage. The adverb prepositional phrase ( in it's cage ) adds information to the verb put.Compare withJack is the student with the lowest grade. The adjective prepositional phrase ( with the lowest grade) modifies the noun student
It is a prepositional phrase functioning as an adverb. Hint: A word or phrase that answers the question 'Where?' is functioning as an adverb (I think).