No, "young" is an adjective. It describes a noun. (Adverbs describe a verb.) The young boy was too small to go on the roller coaster. ("Boy" is a noun, and "young" tells me more about him.)
No, pangolins cannot fly. They are ground-dwelling mammals known for their unique appearance and specialized diet of ants and termites.
well ,
she can already fly she is
put in a lab because she can be tamed :)
she has two wings and can fly so when will she fly is now
thanks you :)
No, "children" is not an adverb. It is a noun that refers to young human beings. Adverbs typically describe verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs and provide more information about how an action is performed.
How does the waterbag elimenate flies?
Water bags are believed to deter flies due to their reflective nature, confusing and scaring them away. Flies perceive the water bag as a larger body of water or a competing territory, which disrupts their natural behavior and prevents them from landing in the area. This method is not scientifically proven but is commonly used as a low-cost and eco-friendly fly repellent.
How do you explain an adverb to a child?
You have to know what a clause is: it is a group of words with a subject (usually a noun or pronoun) and a predicate (a verb). A sentence can have one clause...
"We won the game."
or it can have more than one...
"We won the game because we trained harder."
There are two clauses, and the second one explains something about the first one -- the reason that they won. So "because we trained harder" is a clause that acts as an adverb here, telling why they won. It is an adverb clause.
What is the adverb In the sentence I read the comics in the newspaper today?
The adverb in the sentence is "today". It describes when the action of reading the comics took place.
No, "newspaper" is a noun that refers to a publication containing news, opinions, advertisements, and other information. An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, adjective, or other adverb to convey information about time, manner, place, or degree.
What is the adverb in the sentence The child held your hand tightly?
The adverb in the sentence is "tightly." It describes how the child held your hand.
There is no adverb form of the verb "to read" or the adjective "read" (having been read).
There is a related adjective 'readable' which has the adverb form 'readably."
Is rarely an adverb or adjective?
The word rarely is an adverb. It is an indefinite adverb of frequency (time).
No, the word NEW is a descriptive word, an adjective; the adverb form would be NEWLY. Example uses:
Jane bought a new dress for the party.
The newly painted dog house doesn't look shabby now.
No, the word 'big' is an adjective (used to describe a noun) and an adverb (used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb).
EXAMPLES
adjective: They had a big party for their fiftieth anniversary.
adverb: You must think big to beat the competition.
No, it's an adjective. The adverb is "newly." Another older adverb is "anew."
What is the adverb in the sentence You should not fold any pages in a library book?
I would say that there is no adverb in this sentence as any means some so it wold be an adjective
What kind of adverb is recently?
Recently is an adverb of time (a temporal adverb, or a temporal referent).
Is 'unread' an adverb or a verb or an adjective?
'Unread' is an adjective that describes something that has not been read.
What is the adverb in the sentence many comic strips are printed there.?
The adverb in the sentence is "there," which modifies the verb "printed."
What adverbs are in this sentence Bill studied the text very carefully?
Carefully is the adverb in the sentence, "Bill studied the text very carefully."
No, the noun shelves is the plural form of the singular noun shelf.
A possessive noun is indicated by the use of an apostrophe.
The possessive form of the plural noun shelves is shelves'.
Examples:
The bookcase has four shelves. (plural noun)
She dusted all of the shelves' contents. (plural possessive noun, the contents of the shelves)