But if you count adjectives, adjective phrases, adjective clauses (the latter 2 of which serve as adjectives), adverbs, adverb phrases, and adverb clauses (the latter 2 of which serve as adverbs); you get a very different picture. Especially if you count some that are embedded within others.Anja wrote: Three adjectives. No adverbs.
Then this is virtually nothing but adjectives and adverbs.
Adjectives, adjective clause, adjective phrases:
that opened onto the street
onto the street
of Paris
of hooves
of wheels
on uneven stones
uneven
of peddlers
of a donkey
of a bucket
being winched up
strong
great
[dumping]—probably best seen as a part of a compound noun, not an adjective
of garbage and human waste
outside the city
When the wind blew . . .
Adverbs, adverb phrases, adverb clauses:
from her room that opened onto the street
from her room
that opened onto the street
from the great dumping ground