Yes. It means in a wild manner, or colloquially "extremely" (e.g. wildly popular).
Yes, the word wildly is an adverb.
An example sentence for you is: "the crowd screamed wildly when the band stepped onto the stage".
It is an adverb
"Wildly" is an adverb . . . it modifies a verb (action word). "He was running around the yard wildly". 'Wildy' modifies the verb, 'running'.
You add -ly to a verb.-quickly-stupidly-wildly~♥~Reader58Thank you for reading my answer!
No most adverbs end in ly. Wildly is an adverb.No. It can be an adjective, as in "It was a wild day." It can also be a noun, as in "He lived in the wild".
No, the word wild is used as an adjective (describing a noun). The noun form is wilds or wildness; the adverb form is wildly.
more wildly most wildy
more wildly
It's not a noun of any sort. The word 'on' is an adjective, adverb or preposition. Examples:adjective: Put the air conditioner in the on position.adverb: I waved wildly but he drove right on by us.preposition: I put the book on your desk.
The children ran wildly through the park, laughing and playing games. The wind whipped wildly through the trees, sending leaves scattering in all directions. The party was a success, with the guests dancing wildly to the music.
They wildly ran through the mall.
Translation: salvajemente (if it means "in an uncontrollable way", i.e. He is running around wildly.) // extremadamente (if it means "extremely", i.e. Your information is wildly innacurate.)
Emil Nolde painted Wildly Dancing Children in 1909