No. In the English language, it is considered a noun.
People are questioning it, but I have heard that the adverb for endanger is dangerously.
Often is the adverb in the sentence.
Civically is the adverb form of the word civic.An example sentence is: "they are a group of civicallyminded people".
Those is not an adverb. It is a pronoun or adjective (plural of that).
The term "oftenly" is not a standard adverb in English. While some people may use it informally, "often" is the preferred adverb to indicate frequency.
No. The word folk is a noun, also used as an adjunct or adjective. Another adjective form is "folksy." The adverb (folksily) is seldom used.
adjective = raw adverb = often
"for several weeks" is the adverb phrase modifying the verb "heard."
"They" is a pronoun that is used to refer to a group of people or things. It is not a preposition, adverb, or adjective.
No, it is not a preposition. It is an adverb.
Oh, dude, the adverb in that sentence is "shyly." It's describing how Grandpa is telling people about his adventures at sea. Like, it's totally adding that extra oomph to the verb "telling." So yeah, "shyly" is the adverb in that sentence, no big deal.
It can be either: Most people in the city use taxis and subways to get around. (adjective modifies people) That was the insult that hurt most. (adverb modifies hurt) That model is the most modern. (adverb modifies modern)