Oh, dude, an adverb for fish would be "fishily." Like, you know, if a cat were to swim in the ocean, it would do so fishily. But, like, who really needs to know that?
The adverb is high because it describes how the fish leaped.
adjective
big and swimmy
it is an adverb that as two words in it elf and fish
No. It can be a noun (a fish) or a verb (to be unstable or confused).
It is an adverb. It answers the question "where?" The 4 questions an adverb answers are: Where? When? How often? To what extent?
No, perch is a verb. The chickens perched on the fence. The chickens perched carefully on the fence. - carefully is an adverb.
In the sentence, "Catching fish is one of the oldest pastimes.":the preposition = of;the verb = is (a linking verb).There is no conjunction or adverb in the sentence.
In this sentence, "catching fish" is a gerund: a verb that is doing the job of a noun. "Catching fish" is the subject of the verb "is".
The clause "where he catches the most fish" functions as an adverb, as it provides information on the location of the action "catches." It modifies the verb "catches" by explaining where the action takes place.
In the given sentence, the word 'large' is an adjectivedescribing the noun 'fish'.
fish = noun sea = noun large = adjective swiftly = adverb (swim swiftly)