In the sentence "By the time we got to school, the bell had already rung," the adverb is "already." It modifies the verb "had rung," indicating that the action of the bell ringing occurred prior to the time of arriving at school. The phrase "by the time" also functions adverbially, providing context regarding the timing of the events.
No. School is a noun, or colloquially a verb (to teach). It can be considered an adjunct or adjective, as in school days, school campus.
No. Adverb phrases are often used instead (in school, of school, concerning school).The word school is often used as an adjective/ noun adjunct (school subjects, school uniform), but there is no adverb form. The generally synonymous adjective scholastic and adverb scholastically are often used, which are based on the noun scholar.
No, it is not an adverb. Graduation is a noun, typically used to mean completion of education (high school, college).
No, it's a verb. "John attended school."
No. Steady is an adjective. The adverb form would be steadily.
"Already" is the adverb in the sentence. It modifies the verb "rung" by indicating that the bell had rung before a specific point in time.
The word "already" is an adverb modifying the verb rung.
The adverb of the sentence is quickly.
The adverb is quickly.
The adverb is "outside". It is an adverb of place, describing where they were playing.
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!
Sentences don't modify verbs. Verbs are part of a sentence. A verb in a sentence can be modified by an adverb: verb = walk, adverb = always. I always walk to school. verb = ate adverb = quickly The dog ate his food quickly.
No. School is a noun, or colloquially a verb (to teach). It can be considered an adjunct or adjective, as in school days, school campus.
No she is a personal pronoun.She ran to school. - in this sentence she is the person/thing doing the actionShe ran quickly to school. - in this sentence quickly tells us more information about how she ran.Quickly is an adverb - adverbs give extra information about verbs - the verb is ran
No, there is no adverb form of skipping. The word skipping is the present participle of the verb to skip. Well, it may or may not be an adverb depending upon the usage if the work "skipping" answers questions such as "how," "when," "where," "how much" in that scenario it would be an adverb. So, in the sentence I am skipping. Skipping is clearly not an adverb, but in a sentence like I went to the school skipping, skipping is an adverb
No. Adverb phrases are often used instead (in school, of school, concerning school).The word school is often used as an adjective/ noun adjunct (school subjects, school uniform), but there is no adverb form. The generally synonymous adjective scholastic and adverb scholastically are often used, which are based on the noun scholar.
In that sentence, yesterday is an adverb, 'visited yesterday'. An example sentence for the noun: Yesterday was the last day of the month. The last day of school was yesterday.