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Specialized
Yes, the word narrowly is an adverb.An example sentence for you is: "he narrowly missed the tree by inches".
Narrowly defined means something defined very specifically, it is the opposite of the broadly definition.
Ecscape
I was able to narrowly avert an accident.
Just missing.
judicial restraint.
Four. Of the eight states of the Upper South, four narrowly voted Confederate, and the other four narrowly voted Union.
No.'Narrower' is in comparative adjective form, e.g. "This hallway is narrower than the others".The adverb form would be 'narrowly', e.g. "the train narrowly missed the man by the rails".
Shiloh
Dunkirk
Your two sentences: Tom skidded to the left. Tom narrowly avoided hitting his baby brother's toys. Compound (complex) sentence: Tom skidded to the left, and narrowly avoided hitting his baby brother's toys.