No, it is not normally an adverb. The word "something" is a pronoun, or a noun. But it can substitute for the adverb "somewhat" in the construction "he looks something like his father."
It is an adverb of manner. It tells how something was done.
Always is an adverb. It is an adverb of frequency, it tells us how often something happens.
"Easy" can be both an adjective and an adverb. As an adjective, it describes a noun and as an adverb, it describes a verb or an adjective. For example, "The exam was easy" (adjective) and "He completed the task easily" (adverb).
The word hard can be either an adjective (hard rock) or an adverb (worked hard). The adverb 'hardly' usually has an entirely different connotation.
The word 'again' is an adverb which is used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as something occurring or doing something that has occurred or been done previously.
To reveal is something you do, so it is a verb. An adverb tells HOW you do something.
The adverb is around.
Something
The job of an adverb is to describe verbs
It is an adverb of manner. It tells how something was done.
Yesterday is an adverb. It answers "when" something was done or happened.
It is an adverb. It tells how something is being done.
Adverb. It modifies the verb. If something will "never" happen, it describes when something happen: never.
No, it is an adjective because an adverb is a verb describing something and antique is not an action, it is just desribing something.
No, "nearby" is not a preposition. It is an adverb that describes the location of something in relation to something else.
The adverb of the word available is availably. This adverb tells us when something will or is able to happen.
Yes, it is. The adverb means to do something in a lavish or expensive manner.