An adverb can't be used to describe a milkshake. Milkshake is a noun, and adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs.
The adverb form of the word "accident" is accidentally.An example sentence for you is: "she accidentally spilt her milkshake on her mother's laptop".
you can't but you can describe an adjective with an adverb.
The job of an adverb is to describe verbs
An adverb is a word describing a verb (although it could also describe an adjective or adverb). An example: Monotonously. "The professor lectured monotonously." He went on and on without any enthusiasm or change in tone. You would think he was reading from a book. --- It's very easy to describe the function of an adverb : It simply modifies a verb. It dresses up a verb with different clothes. Not that you always need to use an adverb. However, when you use it, the action may be completely transformed by the adverb. Only adverbs can describe other adverbs.
The adverb is suppose to describe a verb.
Not usually. The word "great" is an adjective as is used to describe a noun.Example: "He is a great athlete".You may be able to use it informally as an adverb as in: "He did great." Here, "great" would describe a verb (did). The formal adverb is "greatly" e.g. "He has greatly improved as a writer."
An adverb describes a verb, an adjective or another adverb.
Just like adjectives describe objects, adverbs describe verbs. All adverbs end in -ly. Destroy is a verb, but you can use any adverb to describe it. For example, "I will destroy you quickly" and "I will destroy you slowly" both contain adverbs, but of opposite meanings. Therefore, there is no single adverb for the verb 'destroy'.
it is used to describe a verb usually after the verb or sometimes before it for example: He runs fast. Fast is the adverb that describes the verb, runs.
You do not need chocolate syrup on vanilla milkshake
It is "descriptive".
No, it is not. To be an adverb a word must describe an action. You cannot use verify in this way. Verify can be a verb, as in 'He verified the information,' or an adjective as 'verified documents.'