The adverb form of "able" is "ably." For example, "She completed the task ably."
The adverb would be shyly.Shyly, I asked the boy out on a date.
The word that goes before "able" is usually an adverb or an adjective. For example, "capable," "comfortable," or "reliable."
No, "please" is not a preposition. It is an adverb that is commonly used to make requests or polite commands.
No, "shrieked" is a verb, specifically the past tense form of the verb "shriek," which means to make a loud, high-pitched sound. An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb, but "shrieked" itself is not an adverb.
"Please" in this sentence is an adverb, modifying the verb "allow" to make the request more polite.
Ably is the correponding adverb to the adjective able.
The adverb form of the adjective "able" is ably, often synonymous with capably.
No, able is an adjective.
No, the suffix -able is a suffix.
Able is an adjective, the corresponding noun is ability and the corresponding adverb is ably.
The adverb is amply.Adjectives that end in -LE (mostly -able, ible, and simple, single) form the adverb by replacing the E with Y.(One, whole, drops the E and adds LY to make the adverb wholly.)
able' is the adjective 'ably' is the adverb 'enable' is the verb (to make able) - usually we ad 'en' to the end of nouns to achieve this (EXAMPLE : strengthen, lighten, etc.) Also, 'disable' (to remove ability)
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The adverb of the word available is availably. This adverb tells us when something will or is able to happen.
No, it is not an adverb. The conjugation "will make" is the future tense of the verb "to make".
Add "ly" to make it an adverb.
An adjective form is demonstrative, with the adverb demonstratively. There is a related adjective demonstrable (able to be demonstrated) which has the well-used adverb demonstrably.