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.
Arun always behave wildly.
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