The clause 'that the coach recommended' may be an adjective clause, as it begins with a relative pronoun (that) and modifies a noun such as plan, or strategy, or program.
(* It might also be part of a noun clause if used as the subject of a sentence, such as That the coach recommended a new plan seemed strange.)
adjective
"that the coach recommended."
"that the coach recommended."
No. It's a noun (He is a leading tennis coach.) or verb (He will coach at the new tennis club.)
It is an adjective phrase, because it will apply to a noun (e.g. plan, program).
It's an adverb.
Time can be used as a noun and a verb. Noun: Do you have the time? Verb: The coach timed our laps. Good is an adjective. We have a good coach.
In the sentence "He plays because the coach is his father," there is no adverb present. The word "because" functions as a conjunction, linking the two clauses. Adverbs typically modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs, but in this case, all words fulfill different grammatical roles.
It is an adverb because it tells when the verb occured.
He was recommended to the club by quarterback coach Dick Rehbein.
Usually, their contract includes a buyout clause. They pay them whatever the buyout amount is.
Second can be an adjective, a noun and a verb. Adjective: Number that comes after first. example: Bob was the second runner to finish the race. Noun: e.g. an additional helping of food/another chance to achieve what you should have done the first time/unit of time. example: The coach waited until there was one second left to call time-out. Verb: To agree as a second person. example: I second his motion.