No. Towards is a preposition. The word "toward" can be a preposition or an adjective (with the antonym untoward).
Yes, "onto" is classified as a preposition, not an adverb. It typically indicates movement toward a surface or a position on something, as in "She climbed onto the roof." It can also express a figurative sense of being aware of or taking action regarding something.
Adverb
It can be an adverb or an adjective.
adverb
No, you is a pronoun not and adverb as its is defining a noun Adverb adds more to a verb like he is walking *fast*
Yes, it is an adverb. It generally means "toward the south" or in a southerly direction.
gently
No, "skyward" is not an adverb. It is an adjective. It describes something that is directed toward or located in the sky.
The likely word is the adverb or preposition "towards" (toward, in a direction).
As an adverb "hither" means "to or toward this place". As an adjective it means "located on the near side."
No. Outward is an adverb (in a direction away, rather than toward). It is generally the opposite of "inward."
The adverb form of the word "eastward" is "eastwardly." It is used to describe movement or direction toward the east. For example, one might say, "The wind blew eastwardly."
The word "when" is an adverb that can function as a conjunction. The other 4 can all be prepositions.
Timorously (adverb): apprehensively; timidlyExample: The boy made his way timorously toward the podium when he was called on to give his speech.
It's an adverb because it describes the verb~
It's an adverb. A verb expresses action, like 'running' or 'breathing', and an adverb modifies parts of speech (mainly verbs and adjectives), and answer questions like 'How?' 'When?' 'Where?' etc.
The word adverb (a modifier of verbs, adjectives, or adverbs) is from the same root as "verb" and means "toward a word." The Latin verbum meant "word" (from spoken word) and the prefix ad- meant toward, creating the Latin word adverbium, which translates as adverb.