No, it would be called an adverbial, because it is more than one word (like the phrase every day) that acts as an adverb of time. The word all by itself can be a pronoun, noun, or adjective, and day is a noun.
No. Day is a noun, meaning daytime or a period of time. The adverb is daily.
If it answers the question "when" for an action verb ("I will leave tomorrow"), it is an adverb. It can also be a noun ("Tomorrow is another day").
Mutually is the adverb form of the word "mutual".An example sentence with this word in it is: "the treaty was mutually beneficial to all those who signed it".
Yes. The phrase "not at all" is an adverb modifying an adjective. It indicates that the characteristic, trait, or state is not present to a great degree. Example: The shop is not at all crowded today. The manager was not at all happy with the changes. The idiom "at all" and the word "not" are both adverbs by themselves.
The adverb tomorrow means occurring 'the day after the current day' and answers the question "when" although it is a future time. If an action is set to occur tomorrow, it should happen then, rather than today. *The word tomorrow is a noun if it is not modifying an action or condition verb.
No. Day is a noun, meaning daytime or a period of time. The adverb is daily.
the next day
No, although "on a perfect day" could be an adverb prepositional phrase. Perfect is an adjective and day is a noun.
Yes, it can. It can rarely be a noun (yesterday was pay day), or a plural noun (all of our yesterdays).
It could be daily.
Very is the adverb. An adverb describes a verb, and very describes how beautiful the autumn day was.
Yes, daily is an adverb. It means done or occurring each day.
"Recited" is not an adverb at all, no.The word "recited" is a verb, not an adverb.
The phrase "every day" is an adverb phrase (daily). The one-word form "everyday" is an adjective meaning usual or common.
The adverb form of lazy is lazily.An example sentence is: "he lazily stayed in bed for most of the day".
Yes. Like an adverb, it tells "when" an action occurred or a condition existed.
The word "yesterday" is used as an adverb and also a noun.Some example sentences are:We went to Bob's house yesterday for some cake, but he ate it all before we got there.Yesterday was an awful day.