"yesterday" and "slowly" function as adverbs in the sentence. "Yesterday" modifies the verb "worked" by indicating when the action took place, and "slowly" modifies how Rachel worked, describing the manner in which she worked.
If you're asking if "You lost the game yesterday" is an independent clause, yes. It can be on its own and be a complete sentence.
The adverb in this sentence is "wearily" because it describes how Sally dropped onto the couch.
Yes, "right" is an adverb in this sentence because it describes the direction in which the car turned. Adverbs often describe how, when, or where an action takes place.
A subordinate clause cannot stand alone as a complete sentence because it does not express a complete thought. It depends on an independent clause to form a complete sentence. Subordinate clauses usually act as adverbs, adjectives, or nouns in a sentence.
Well, it depends on the sentence. Like if I said, "I am typing the answer for you." it would be a present-tense verb. But if I said, "I was typing the answer for you." it would be past-tense because I said I was.Hope I helped!Could also be future - I am typing my report on the weekend.
Because it will make your sentence positive.
An adjective modifies or further describes a noun or pronoun. For example, in the sentence "The red flower was pretty," red and pretty are adjectives because they further describe the flower. Adjectives are often confused with adverbs, which modify adjectives, verbs, or other adverbs.
The adverbs are often (walks), quickly (walks), and always (late).
It is suppose to be I swam in the pool yesterday because it's past tense
i was absent yesterday because I was sick that day
no...it would have to say: It is because the frog was heavy yesterday morning. Is because does not make sense & if you put it is because then it does make sense.
In the phrase 'was copying,' there are no adverbs. There are no adverbs because it only has a verb in it.
sometimes and quite are adverbs all the other word are not adverbs.
lousy
because it is not yesterday because it is not yesterday because it is not yesterday
Some words are both adverbs and prepositions (e.g, below, before, in, through).Some words are always or almost always prepositions (at, for, with).Some words are adverbs that cannot ever be prepositions (then, there, later).That being said, there are many more prepositions that can be adverbs than there are adverbs that can also be prepositions.
If you're asking if "You lost the game yesterday" is an independent clause, yes. It can be on its own and be a complete sentence.