biscuit
no prosperous is not an adverb. it is an adjective.
Recession is a noun. It has an adjective form recessional and an adverb recessionally (which refers to the manner). There is a related adverb "recessive" (not dominant) which has the adverb form recessively.
No, it is not an adverb. Profit can be a noun, or a verb. A related adjective is "profitable" and has the adverb form "profitably."
The adverb of benefit is beneficially. The adjective is beneficial and the noun is beneficialness. Benefits is noun and has no adverb.
One adverb of "cheap" is "very,", ie. such as very cheap.
"Soon" is an adverb as it qualifies a verb, e.g. Soon he will run his race.
Soon is the adverb, leave is a verb. So in "I leave soon" the adverb soon is modifying the verb leave.
The adverb is 'soon' as it describes when.
No, it is a pair of adverbs. The adverb soon modifies the adverb after, which will modify a verb.
The adverb is "soon" because it describes whensomething happened.
An adverb of time. "Soon" does not describe how frequently something happens as a habit. "Soon" means "a short time in the future" which is a description of time.
adverb
Soon is an adverb; be is a verb.
the word soon is an adverb
The comparative form of the adverb soon is SOONER: She arrived SOONER than the other guests.
Adjective
Yes, it is an adverb of indefinite time. Depending on the time scale, "soon" can vary tremendously in actual time.