No, it's an adjective. Deliciously is an adverb.
Delicious is almost always used as an adjective, but you could turn it into an adverb by adding an -ly, as in "She was dancing deliciously in her little black dress" or something similar.
No. It has to end in an -ly to be an adverb.
No, the word delicious is not an adverb. Delicious is an adjective.
The adverb form of the word is deliciously.
The adverb is 'especially' because it describes how delicious the dinner was.
"Delicious" is an adjective.
Golden Delicious apples taste so good I would say they are delicious!
adjetive
The word delicious is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun; for example:a delicious meala delicious daya delicious treatThe word delicious is also a noun as a type of apple, a red delicious or a yellow delicious.
You need an adverb delicious because deliciously sounds retarded thank you and goodbye
delicious
Tragically (be careful with the spelling!)
In this context, "delicious" is an adjective that describes the quality of the singing. It conveys that the singing is pleasurable and enjoyable to the senses.
Modifying verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. - Modifying verb: "The girl ran quickly." - Modifying adjective: "The cake tasted extremely delicious." - Modifying adverb: "Julia ran extremely quickly."
It's an adverb. Delicious is an adjective, but when you add the suffix -ly, it is describing the manner in which someone is doing something.Example: Julianna Margulies is deliciously nuanced as wronged woman Alicia Florrick in The Good Wife.The word deliciously is not modifying the subject, Julianna Margulies, but the predicate (verb), nuanced, in the sentence.
No, delicately is an adverb. The adjective form is "delicate" (fragile, or elegant).