Yes. It is an adverb, saying "where" to go.
In the sentence "I go home," "home" is not an object; it functions as an adverb indicating the destination or direction of the action (going). An object typically receives the action of the verb, while an adverb modifies the verb by indicating aspects like place, time, or manner.
Well, isn't that a happy little question! The adverb in the sentence "where do you go to school" is "where." It tells us more about the verb "go" by describing the place. Remember, every word in a sentence plays a special role in creating a beautiful picture of communication!
This cannot be answered. You will have to give me some choices to choose from.
No, as far as I know. Adverbs are modifiers. Sentence complements include direct objects, predicate adjectives, predicate nominatives, and indirect objects; they go on the base line of a sentence diagram. Modifiers go below the base line.
Yes, yesterday is a temporal adverb, modifying the verb "to go" by placing it in a particular time setting. "The day before yesterday" would be an adverbial phrase.
In the sentence "I go home," "home" is not an object; it functions as an adverb indicating the destination or direction of the action (going). An object typically receives the action of the verb, while an adverb modifies the verb by indicating aspects like place, time, or manner.
"not" is the adverb in that sentence. It modifies the verb "go".
Straight is both an adjective and an adverb.
Not.
Well, isn't that a happy little question! The adverb in the sentence "where do you go to school" is "where." It tells us more about the verb "go" by describing the place. Remember, every word in a sentence plays a special role in creating a beautiful picture of communication!
go is the verb and among is the adverb
The phrase "every week" is an adverb phrase, as would be the single word "weekly."
never
early
Lets go downstairs!
Well, honey, in the first sentence "might" is the adverb modifying the verb "go." In the second sentence, "tomorrow" is the adverb telling us when you'll go. So, there you have it, two adverbs strutting their stuff in those sentences.
lets go to the launderette to wash clothes