Not both together. Go is a verb, and back is the adverb.
It can be an adverb (go faster). It can also be an adjective, or a noun for a person who is fasting.
It usually is an adverb, indicating location (e.g. where did he go?) But it can also be a conjunction in the same way as "when" or "how."
The word "after" can be an adverb, but it is most commonly used as a preposition or a conjunction. The more common adverbs are "afterwards" and "thereafter." After is more commonly an elliptical adverb: "I left before lunch, and came back after."
No, the verb is " to go", the word "in" describes were you go and is an adverb. Ask your self this, "to go where?" , "to go in". :] enjoy your new found knowledge
No, went is a verb. It's the past tense form of go.
The adverb is NOT, modifying the verb "go" (will go).
"not" is the adverb in that sentence. It modifies the verb "go".
The word back in "back into" is a verb or adverb. The word "into" is a form of in that is also a preposition. "He went back into the room." (back is an adverb; into the room is a prepositional phrase used as an adverb; into is a preposition) "Don't back into that tree." (back is a verb, into the tree is a prepositional phrase used as an adverb, into is a preposition)
go
No, the word "go" is not an adverb.The word "go" is a verb, a noun, an interjection and an adjective.
Patiently is an adverb that would go with wait.
No.The word "back" can be a noun (your back, the back side of something), a verb (to back up), an adjective(he's back, meaning returned) or an adverb (to go or move back).The word back is sometimes combined with or modified by a preposition, such as in back in the saddle, back at the house, and back to the future. But it is not used as a preposition.
It can be either. It is an adjective when it precedes a noun (back fence) or when it follows a linking verb (he is back). It is an adverb when it answers the question "where" (reached back, jumped back). It can also be a noun (the back of something or someone).
Yes. It is an adverb, saying "where" to go.
The word "no" can be an adjective or adverb. It is also rarely a noun. As an interjection, it might also be considered an adverb. Adjective: We had no food and no water. Adverb: We could go no farther. The patient has gotten no better.* Noun: His answer was a firm no. Interjection: No, I won't go. * The adverb form is "not." The use of "no" as an adverb often includes examples where "not" would be used in a different construction (e.g. We could go no farther/ We could not go farther)
Go is a verb.
Phrasal adverb