Recently is an adverb of time (a temporal adverb, or a temporal referent).
Recently is an adverb.
Recently is the adverb.
"Recently" can be used as both an adverb and an adjective. As an adverb, it describes when an action took place, such as "I recently arrived." As an adjective, it can describe a noun, such as "the recently published book."
No, "recently" is an adverb, not a subordinating conjunction. Subordinating conjunctions are words like "because," "although," and "if" that join dependent clauses to an independent clause in a sentence. "Recently" does not perform this function.
There are no adjectives or adverbs. The word 'a' is an article, not actually an adjective. The sentence "I have recently written a biographical book", for example, would have the adverb 'recently' (when was it written) and the adjective 'biographical' (what kind of book).
Recently is an adverb.
No, it's an adverb. You can generally recognize an adverb by the suffix "ly." An adverb modifies a verb. "He recently sang at Carnegie Hall." In this sentence the verb is "sang." "I recently saw a movie." The verb is "saw."
Yes, the word 'recently' is an adverb because it alters the meaning of a verb. An example would be 'he recently had the flu and was unable to go to school' where had/have is the verb.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is an adverb.
Recently is an adverb, telling you more about a verb. "I recently visited Paris, to see the Louvre."
Recent is an adjective: 'The recent sales have increased our turnover'. Recently is the adverb: 'The sales we held recently have increased our turnover'.
An adverb of negation.