No, the word finely is not an adjective. This is an adverb.
The adjective of the word is fine.
Yes, it can be. As an adjective, it can mean well, or delicate, or pure, or splendid. It has several uses as a noun and verb.
No, it's an adverb. The adjective is fine
Yes, it is an adjective. It means rough (opposite of smooth), not ground finely, or vulgar.
Yes, finely ground is acceptable English to describe coffee beans that have been ground into a powder.
It can be, informally, as in "He is doing fine." But this is very close to an adjective use. The formal adverb is "finely."
The word is likely one of these:ground - (adjective) chopped finely (noun) dirt, surfacegroaned - (verb) made a groan, moan, or similar sound
A small girl with a bow placed finely above her head.
Woven is the past participle form of the verb "weave," which is a regular verb.
She painted each detail with finely tuned precision.
Finely ground pepper.
She chopped the vegetables finely to add to the soup.
Sure, if they are finely chopped enough.
Finely ground tobacco is called snuff.
The noun 'onion' is a count noun:1 onion finely chopped2 onions finely chopped