occasionally
The word yearly is an adverb of time. It tells when something did occur or will occur. Other examples of an adverb relating to time would include never, once, and tomorrow.
No, it is not. It is a noun related to the verb repeat(occur again, do again). Adverb forms include repetitivelyor much less frequently repetitiously.
Daily answers the question "how often" does an activity occur. When it precedes a noun, it is an adjective.
The adverb tomorrow answers the question "when" an action or situation will occur. Because it is in the future, actions must use the future tenses or the imperative mood (e.g. Fix the machine tomorrow).
No, it is not an adverb. Truthful is an adjective, and the adverb form is "truthfully."
occurrentially
The word yearly is an adverb of time. It tells when something did occur or will occur. Other examples of an adverb relating to time would include never, once, and tomorrow.
No. Happen is not an adverb. It is a verb (to happen, to occur).
No, it is not. It is a noun related to the verb repeat(occur again, do again). Adverb forms include repetitivelyor much less frequently repetitiously.
Daily answers the question "how often" does an activity occur. When it precedes a noun, it is an adjective.
No. Bilaterally is an adverb because it describes how something is done, and adverbs do not have plural form.
"Soon" is an adverb that describes when something will happen in the future. It modifies a verb, adjective, or other adverb to indicate that the action or state will occur shortly or in a short amount of time.
No, "space" is not an adverb of place. It is a noun that refers to the physical area or expanse where objects exist and events occur. Adverbs of place typically describe the location or position of an action or object in relation to another.
The adverb tomorrow answers the question "when" an action or situation will occur. Because it is in the future, actions must use the future tenses or the imperative mood (e.g. Fix the machine tomorrow).
Here is preposition used in a sentence. Adverb phrases use a preposition to tell what, when and how an action can occur.
No, it is an adverb. Events that occur "unfortunately" are those that negatively affect individuals or locales ("Unfortunately, the storm passed directly over the state.")
The complete adverb clause in the sentence is "if we sell our house". It functions as a subordinate clause that provides a condition or circumstance under which the main action of moving to Abilene will occur.