An adverb adds onto verb!
A verb is an action.
I will make the adverb bold in these examples.
My dog ate its food loudly.
Loudly describes HOW my dog ate its food.
Joan painted messily.
Messily described HOW Joan painted. It describes (adds on to) the verb, which is the action (painted).
Really hope this helps!
The phrase "to the front door" is a fragment, but more importantly, it is a prepositional phrase. Any phrase without a subject or verb that begins with the attached list is called a prepositional phrase, and they can be either adjectival (defining a noun) or adverbial (describing a verb, an adjective, or another adverb).
Hope that helped! =)
Eco cars are still too expensive for most car buyers
The answer is B. Dilapidated means to be “in a state of disrepair or ruin as a result of age or neglect.”
In simple terms, dilapidated means something is old and abandoned and not is good shape.
Answer:
Nouns: you, I
Hyperbole: Throw my hand on a blade
Metaphor: I'd catch a grenade for you
Onomatopoeia: ( I suggest if you can, choose another song, onomatopoeia is normally characterized by sounds of things for example if he said Grenades go BOOM that would be onomatopoeia)
Similie: same thing, look for song that use comparative language such as like or as in their metaphors because that's what really makes a simile