Yes, but it means more than that.(:
more industrious and most industrious
An industrious employee is very valuable
England was an industrious nation after the Industrial age.
industrious
No.An adverb adds information about a verb.Example sentences:* "That worker is very industrious." ... It is the person that is industrious, so industrious is an adjective. An adjective gives additional information about a noun. * "He works industriously." This tells us how he 'works'. 'Work' is a verb. A word that tells us more about a verb is an adverb, so industriously is an adverb.
The name Emily means "Industrious"
The name Emily means "industrious; striving." It is derived from Latin.
flatterer
Industrious.
The name Amalie is a variant of both Amelia and Emily. The names have Latin origins, and mean "industrious" and "laborious." Meanings of other names can be found on the web domain "ThinkBabyNames."
Emily comes from the Latin girl's name "Aemilia", which means "rival"
It comes from the Latin name meaning "admiring"
Technically, it means "little Emily"(because of the suffix --ita) but people use it as a unique substitute to the name Emily, so it also means industrious and hard-working.
WHO is Emily Haverty you mean? Emily is a name, not a WHAT.
That is the usual spelling of the female given name Emma, or Emmah. Originally a short form of names such as Ermintrude.
the name Emily mean beatiful gift from the heavens
Emily is a proper name, a female first name. It can be either Emily or Emilia in Spanish.