The clause is "since you never miss a sale at the bakery." The other adverb is obviously.
Never is the adverb. It modifies the verb "will forget." It acts the same as the adverb "not."
"Ever" is an adverb.
The adverb is never, which modifies the verb "eat."
Yes, never is an adverb, and more rarely an interjection (Never!).
The verb is 'have been', the adverb is 'never'.
Adverb. It modifies the verb. If something will "never" happen, it describes when something happen: never.
Never is an adverb of frequency. It means '0 times' or 'at no time'.
The word 'never' is an adverb.
"While talking" is an adverb clause; it describes in what circumstance (how/when) the teacher knocked over his glass, the PM sneezed, the newscaster skilfully pointed out the fronts without even looking at them, or whatever. An adjective clause describes the subject of the sentence (ex.: "The quetzal, native to South America, is viridian to teal in colour."), and you can think of a noun clause as any phrase that represents a single person/place/thing (ex.: "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself", "Anyone who would stoop to that low is despicable", "I've never condoned that sort of thing", "That thing the NSDAP called nationalism frightens me"). Noun and adjective clauses can get a little sketchy sometimes, but I don't think that's in the scope of this question.
It is never an adverb. It is always a preposition. The word "within" can be an adverb or a preposition, and the word "forthwith" (immediately) is an adverb.
It is never an adverb. It is always a preposition. The word "within" can be an adverb or a preposition, and the word "forthwith" (immediately) is an adverb.
The word 'why' is an adverb, a conjunction, a noun, and an interjection.The adverb 'why' introduces a question or an adverbial clause.Examples:Why were you late? (the adverb 'why' modifies the verb 'were late')The reason why I was late is due to an electrical outage. (the adverb 'why' introduces the adverbial clause 'why I was late')The conjunction 'why' connects two independent thoughts into one sentence.Example: She never told me why she didn't go back.The noun 'why' is a word for a reason or explanation.Example: You gave the right answer except the why.The interjection 'why' is used to exclaim or protest or command.Example: Why, I never said that!