It seems to me that overhead is a person, place, or thing, which would make it a noun.Overhead can also be an adjective, as in 'An overheadroad is also called a flyover.', or an adverb, as in 'He held the book overhead when asked to raise the book aloft.'
Does is a verb, not an adverb.
The adverb is highly
It can be an adverb or an adjective.
adverb
The adverb is overhead.
Overhead can be an adverb. But it can also be an adjective or noun. Planes flying "overhead" would be an adverb. Overhead wires would be an adjective. The overhead of a business would be a noun.
The word 'overhead' is a noun, an adjective and an adverb.Examples:We put our coats in the overhead. (noun)This cost goes into overhead expenses. (noun)The ball flew overhead and out of sight. (adverb)
There isn't one.
It seems to me that overhead is a person, place, or thing, which would make it a noun.Overhead can also be an adjective, as in 'An overheadroad is also called a flyover.', or an adverb, as in 'He held the book overhead when asked to raise the book aloft.'
The word aloft is an adverb. It means overhead or in the air.
Overhead rate : Overhead rate = total overhead cost / direct labor OR Overhead rate = Total overhead cost / machine hours.
The two types of overhead are fixed overhead and variable overhead. Fixed overhead remains constant regardless of production levels, while variable overhead fluctuates in direct proportion to production activity.
To calculate under or overapplied overhead, subtract the actual overhead costs from the applied overhead costs. If the actual overhead costs exceed the applied overhead costs, it is overapplied. If the applied overhead costs exceed the actual overhead costs, it is underapplied.
Combined overhead variance = fixed overhead variance + variable overhead varianceFixed Overhead :which remains fixed and donot change upto certain level of productionVariable Overhead: which keep changing with the change in production units.
Using direct labor hours: Overhead rate = Total Overhead Expenses /Direct labor hours Using Machine hours: Overhead rate = Total Overhead Expenses /Machine hours
The "overhead"