The kite soared upwards (state predicate has an object or a complement)
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The kite soared high.
Kite is the noun subject, preceded by the article “The.”
“Soared” is the intransitive verb and has no object, but does have a complement, “high.”
“High” in this sentence tells where the kite soared, so it is an adverb.
“High” can be an adjective in a sentence such as “The high point of my day was my daughter’s visit,” but here it is modifying a verb (“soared”), which automatically tells us it is an adverb (since that is the part of speech that modifies verbs) and it is telling us “where” the kite soared.
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