No, specific is an adjective. The adverb form is "specifically."
Usually is an adverb of frequency.
Yes, it is an adverb, the adverb form of the adjective usual. It means typically, ordinarily, or commonly.
An adverb is a word that describes a verb.
Yes, it is an adverb, the adverb form of the adjective usual. It means typically, ordinarily, or commonly.
Yes. It tells how you do something. Example: I normally go to the store on Sundays.
The word with is not an adverb; it is a preposition. The word "without" may be an adverb (e.g. to do without, where no specific object is used).
No, "last week" is a noun phrase that refers to a specific period of time in the past. It does not function as an adverb.
No, "in the summer" would be a prepositional phrase.
It can be, when it modifies an adjective as in "I didn't think the water was this deep" where it is a non-specific reference to another non-specific modifier. The word is otherwise a pronoun ("This is Sparta!") or an adjective ("This town isn't big enough for both of us.")
This question confuses me. Grief is either an abstract noun: e.g. His grief was incredible. OR, in a very specific context, a verb. It does not have an adverb.
An adverb is a word that modifies a verb.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective is just previous.
Sunny is an adjective. We say: A sunny day. A sunny disposition. The sunny side of the street. The adverb 'sunnily' has rare but specific uses.
A delayed adverb is an adverb that appears in a different position than expected in a sentence, often for emphasis or stylistic reasons. It is used to create a specific effect or to draw attention to the adverb or the information it modifies.
"The new library opens in a month" is a Adverb
No. It can be a verb "to shriek" to make a specific sound, or a noun "a shriek" the specific sound made.
"All" is primarily used as a determiner or pronoun, indicating the total amount or the entirety of something. It can function as an adverb in specific contexts, particularly in phrases like "all the more," where it modifies the degree of an adjective or adverb. However, its main grammatical role is not as an adverb.