The adverb in the sentence is "together." Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs, providing information about how, when, where, or to what extent an action is performed. In this case, "together" modifies the verb "went," indicating that the action of going to the library was done jointly with someone else.
It's an adverb of time.
Yes, it is an adverb of indefinite frequency.
Yesterday is an adverb. It answers "when" something was done or happened.
Phrasal adverb
The adverb is quickly.
Yes, the word yesterday is both a noun and an adverb. In the sentence, 'Yesterday, you went power kiting', yesterday is used as an adverb modifying the verb went, 'you went yesterday...'.
In the sentence "you went so far," "far" is an adverb modifying the verb "went." It describes the distance or extent of the action.
There is not adverb form for the noun merriment; but a closely related adverb is merrily. Example sentence:She sang merrily as she went about her work.
No, went is a verb. It's the past tense form of go.
Neither. Went is actually a verb, the past tense of "go."
adverb - yesterday adjective - new
No, it is a verb
outside
The word "by" is usually a preposition, but it can be an adverb if there is no object. "She watched as the bird flew by." "He was disappointed how quickly the two weeks went by."
No. The colloquial term 'far out' is an adjective. Far can be an adjective or an adverb, and out can be an adverb or (arguably) a preposition (as in She went out the door).
It is adverb of place because it shows a direction. It tells us where he went. Compare to He went out.