The adverb for "stand" is "steadily." Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs to provide more information about the manner, time, place, degree, or frequency of an action. In this case, "steadily" describes how someone is standing, indicating a stable or unwavering posture.
It can be an adverb but is more often an adjective. The adverb is used primarily with the verb "stand."
The word 'at' is the adverb. Up is an adverb here. I think.
Still and quiet
It is a preposition. It cannot stand alone to modify a verb.
No. Stand is a noun, or verb (to stand up). There is no adverb than means in a standing manner, so you would use a preposition, or a synonym such as upright.
firmly, weakly, strongly, boldly, barely.. etc.
Yes, it can indicate the general location as in "stand by" or "the car raced by." But it is more often a preposition.
"By" is usually a preposition, but it can also be a part, sometimes called a "separable suffix", of a compound verb, as in, "stand by", meaning to wait. (Some persons, who do not accept that English has compound verbs with separable suffixes, would call "by" in "stand by" an adverb.)
"Stood" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "stand."
Not actually. The abbreviation i.e. is the Latin term "id est" (that is). Although often classified as an adverb, it is used like a conjunction to mean "in other words" and cannot stand by itself.
noun - law firm adjective - a firm stance adverb - stand firm verb - to firm
The term "outside" can be used as a preposition AND an adverb - depending on how the sentence is phrased.For example:I walked outside. (In this sentence, "outside" is an adverb because "I walked" can stand alone as an individual sentence.)Outside of the house, the winds roared. (In this case, "outside" is a preposition because the rest of the sentence cannot stand alone.)