NO!!! It is a common noun .
The vast majority of adverbss in the English language end in '---ly'.
For common nounds , the (in)definite article (a/an)the immediately preceeds a noun.
.e.g. An house ( NOT 'a house'.)
The house.
For the indefinite article 'a/an' , 'a' is used for nouns beginning with a consonant, and 'an' is used for nouns beginning with a vowel a,e,i,o,u, and the consonant 'h' only.
It is NEITHER a horse nor a house, but 'an horse' or 'an house'. ; an hour etc.,
NO!!! It is a superlative adjective. e.g. Dative ; close Comparative ; closer Superlattive ; closest . The house along the road is close to our house. The house , next but one, is closer to our house The adjacent house is the closest to our house.
The word "yesterday" is used as an adverb and also a noun.Some example sentences are:We went to Bob's house yesterday for some cake, but he ate it all before we got there.Yesterday was an awful day.
Does is a verb, not an adverb.
Adverb
It can be an adverb or an adjective.
The phrase "in the old house" is a prepositional phrase, using "in." It can be used as an adverb, or an adjective.
No. house can be a noun or a verb or an adjective
It could be either. This is determined by the word it modifies. Adverb phrase: The house was built on the hill. (modifies was built) Adjective phrase: The house on the hill is haunted. (modifies house)
The adverb of immediate is immediately.An example sentence for you is: "she immediately ran out of the haunted house".
An adverb is a word that modifies or qualifies an adjective, verb, or other adverb or a word group. The only word in the sample sentence that performs this function is "steadily".
The adverb clause in the sentence is 'if we sell our house.' An adverb clause contains a subject and verb, a subordinate conjunction that keeps the phrase from containing a complete thought, and answers the question of how, when, or why.
You need context. Adjective- The shaggy dog walked into the house. Noun- Shaggy, our dog, walked into the house. It can't be a verb or adverb.
NO!!! It is a superlative adjective. e.g. Dative ; close Comparative ; closer Superlattive ; closest . The house along the road is close to our house. The house , next but one, is closer to our house The adjacent house is the closest to our house.
No. Theater is a noun (a movie house, or drama in general).The adverb form would be theatrically (in a dramatic form).
It can be any of the three:He had gone to the house before the storm hit. (subordinating conjunction)He had gone to the house before noon. (preposition, with noun object)He had gone to the house before. (adverb, meaning previously)
It can be a preposition or more rarely an adverb. Preposition : It is in the house. Adverb: The man came in.
"Downstairs" can be an adverb, an adjective, or a noun: (as adverb) We went downstairs. (as adjective) This house has a downstairs bedroom. (as noun) The downstairs is flooded.