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"Surrounding" is a participle that can function as an adjective, noun, or adverb in a sentence. It is often used to describe the area around something or someone.
It is both adverb - He arrived around five o'clock. There were several young people sitting around looking bored. preposition - The house is built around a courtyard. They drove around town.
It can be, to mean slowly. "Go slow around the curves."
Also is not a preposition, it is an adverb. It modifies a verb in the sentence. I have cows / I ALSO have cows. I SURELY have cows. I unfortunately have cows. All these are adverbs. Think of a preposition as anything you can do to a cloud. You can go OVER, UNDER, AROUND, THROUGH, BESIDE, etc to a cloud.
The word about can be a preposition, an adverb and an adjective.Preposition: Near; not farAdverb: Nearly; approximatelyAdjective: Moving around
The adverb is carefully.
we can change it around
No. It is an adverb phrase that answers the question where.
She ran quickly around the tree is a sentence, or a clause. Quickly is an adverb. It gives us more information about the verb ran.
adverb NO ITS A PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE!!! It is definitely an adverb because it answers the question "where". Besides, a prepositional phrase needs an object (which has to be a noun or pronoun), and, in this sentence, we don't know around "what".
It could be either.The satellite flew around the Earth. (adverb)The radiation belt around the Earth can affect satellites. (adjective)
* The adverb phrase is "in its orbit" and modifies the verb "continues" (in its orbit around the Earth including the adjective phrase) *The adverb clause is "as the Moon continues in its orbit around the Earth."
In the sentence, the adverb phrase is "around the Earth." This phrase modifies the verb "continues," indicating the manner in which the main (presumably referring to a celestial body) is orbiting. Adverb phrases provide additional context about how, when, or where an action takes place.
The adverb is around.
The adverb around answers the question where. Around can be an adverb when it acts alone, or a preosition when it has an object. Examples: An old cat sometimes comes around. (adverb) The shop is around the corner. (preposition)
In the sentence "The earth moves round the sun," the word "round" is considered a preposition because it shows the relationship between the earth and the sun by indicating the direction of movement around something.
It can be an adverb (used without an object) or a preposition. There is an old dog that comes around. (adverb) We drove around the block. (preposition)