Short answer: No
Long Answer:
A verb is a doing word. (eg. walking, talking, typing)
An adverb is a word that describes a verb. (eg. quickly, quietly, boldly)
A noun is a word for a person, place or thing. (man, city, table)
A proper noun is a name for a person, place or thing. (Jack, Toronto, Kleenex)
An adjective is a word that describes a noun. (red, fast, big)
So "man" is a noun.
The adverb for agree is agreeably.An adverb describes a verb. An example would be The elderly lady spoke agreeably to the young man who helped her across the speak.
The old man ran suprisingly quickly for his age.
The word "face" is not an adverb. It can be used as a noun and a verb. Noun: She shielded her face from the bright light. Verb: The man hesitantly faced the judge.
Oh, dude, sprinkle is not an adverb. It's actually a verb. An adverb would be something like "lightly" sprinkling, you know, adding that extra oomph to the verb. But sprinkle all on its own? Just a verb, man. Like, no big deal.
No, it is not an adverb. Truthful is an adjective, and the adverb form is "truthfully."
An adverb of place - where did the man run? - forward.
Mean can be ad adverb. For example, the mean man, would be using the word mean as an adverb.
it can be an adjective or an adverb. Sentence as an adjective - Abraham was a just man. Sentence as an adverb. Abraham was just a man.
There is no adverb.
The man ran quickly.Ran being the verbAnd quickly being the adverb
The adverb for agree is agreeably.An adverb describes a verb. An example would be The elderly lady spoke agreeably to the young man who helped her across the speak.
No, it is an adjective. The adverb form is "untidily." Example: In the entrance was an untidily dressed old man carrying a knapsack.
There isn't one
No, it's an adjective. "That man is dangerous." (describes the noun, man) The adjective form is dangerously (in a dangerous manner).
It can be an adverb. But manly is usually an adjective, that means "of or like a man."
It can be a preposition or more rarely an adverb. Preposition : It is in the house. Adverb: The man came in.
An adjective prepositional phrase describes a noun or pronoun, answering "which one?" An adverb prepositional phrase usually modifies the verb in a sentence, but it can also modify an adjective or adverb. It answers when, where, how, or to what degree. The man in the car waved. (in the car, adjective, modifies man - which man?) He jumped into the car. (into the car, adverb, modifies jumped - where did he jump?)