No, car is a noun.
It can be an adverb, a preposition, or a conjunction. "He had seen the car before." (adverb) "He saw the car before the storm. (preposition) "He saw the car before it was washed away by the storm." (conjunction)
The adverb carefully modifies the verb drives.The adverb very modifies the adverb carefully.
An adverb is a word which modifies a verb, such as: She haltingly spoke of her experience. In this sentence, the word "haltingly" is the adverb. In the sentence you provided, "How" is not an adverb.
Underground is an adverb, as in beneath the surface of the ground. It is an adjective, as in an underground car park
The adverb of the word skill is skilfully.An example sentence is: "he skilfully repaired the car".
An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb. With verbs, an adverb indicates how, when, or why an action is done. For adjective or adverbs, an adverb specifies the extent or manner of the modifier. Examples: He walked slowly to the car. - slowly modifies the verb walked He walked very slowly to the car. - very modifies the adverb slowly He was extremely tired. - extremely modifies the adjective tired
No. A modifier that follows a state of being (linking) verb is an adjective. The car is fast. (adjective) The car drove very fast. (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?)
Yes, it appears to be an adverb of cause: the car was washed because someone left early. But was it washed because they had nothing else to do, or because they couldn't get to the car otherwise?
An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb. With verbs, an adverb indicates how, when, or why an action is done. For adjective or adverbs, an adverb specifies the extent or manner of the modifier. Examples: He walked slowly to the car. - slowly modifies the verb walked He walked very slowly to the car. - very modifies the adverb slowly He was extremely tired. - extremely modifies the adjective tired
Yes, "right" is an adverb in this sentence because it describes the direction in which the car turned. Adverbs often describe how, when, or where an action takes place.
Yes, it is an adverb meaning "certainly" or "positively."