Far is the adverb. It tells where (in distance) we drove.
"Best" can be used as an adjective or an adverb.
A dictionary or an online thesaurus would be a good reference source to find the part of speech for the word "really." It is an adverb that is used to modify adjectives or other adverbs in a sentence.
"Near" is used as an adverb to indicate proximity or closeness. For example: "The store is near my house." It can also be used as a preposition followed by a noun, as in "The park is near the library."
The best way to punctuate the bolded portion of the sentence would be to use quotation marks, for example: "This is the bolded portion of the sentence."
"Whom" is a pronoun used as the object of a verb or a preposition in a sentence. In the given sentence, "whom" is referring to the teacher that you like best.
The adverb in that sentence is "far." You drove far to find that juicy burger, huh? Well, I hope it was worth the gas money.
there
Yes. Forward is an adverb modifying the verb "put."
hamburger with cheese
Hamburger Hamliet
Very.
well i can not answer that because it is what your favourite hamburger in Michigan
You have a complex sentence. Best is the last word of a complete sentence. When is an adverb. It is followed by the word They. The word They starts a complete sentence. Thus, the word when makes the second sentence subordinate to the first sentence. That makes it complex.
hamburger
The word "best" is a comparative (superlative) adjective, not an adverb.
OASIS in Cottondale
The noun is: jelly beans (compound noun)The pronoun is: youThe verb is: likeThe adjectives are: red and bestThere is no adverb in the sentence.