No fell is a verb: the past tense of fall
fall / fell / fallen
You might fall if you sit there.
Humpty Dumpty fell off the wall.
The price of fish has fallen this week.
The word *out* is an adverb (e.g he ran out, the contents fell out). But it also has the related adverbs outward and outwardly.
It can be either, depending on how it's being used. If it has a noun as its object, it is a preposition. The horse fell over. (adverb) The horse fell over the cliff. (preposition)
A prepositional phrase is not defined by its words, but by the word it modifies. This can be either an adjective or adverb phrase. The mark on the turtle's shell is brown - adjective, modifies mark The paint fell on the turtle's shell. - adverb, modifies fell
He fell behind during the hike.
No. Laughing is a verb, laughter is a noun. An example of an adverb used in a sentence would be - The announcer was laughing loudly as he fell out of his chair. Loudly is the adverb.
Snow fell much earlier than usual.
Yes. It means in a heavy, weighty, or extensive manner. "He fell heavily to the floor." "The device was heavily modified to withstand underwater pressure."
In the sentence, "The tree fell down." there is one noun: treeThe word 'the' is an article designating a specific tree.The word 'fell' is the verb.The word 'down' is an adverb modifying the verb 'fell'.
It is usually a preposition.It can be an adverb in the truncated, superfluous or idiomatic form (fell to, turned to) as seen in the still common form "came to" (awoke, revived, came to his senses).The construction is now much more common in British English.*The homophone "too" is an adverb.
In the sentence "A large tree fell down during the storm," "down" functions as an adverb, modifying the verb "fell." It indicates the direction of the falling action.
It can be, as in "left out" or "picked out" or "fell out." It can also be a noun. It is less clearly a preposition (elliptical form of "out of") or adjective (out as in not in, or present).
"Off" is an adverb. But it can be considered a preposition in some cases.HoweverIn a case like "She fell off the bed", the preposition ofis understood, completing the actual prepositional phrase "(of) the bed". "Off" remains purely an adverb modifying the verb "fell", telling where she fell.