She approached the stage hesitantly, unsure if she was ready to perform in front of a large audience.
No, "hesitantly" is not a noun. It is an adverb that describes how an action is carried out, such as speaking or acting with hesitation or uncertainty.
She used a loom to weave a beautiful tapestry.
The tense in the sentence "the teacher put the book on the table" is past tense. The verb "put" indicates that the action happened in the past.
You can put "was asking" into a sentence like this: She was asking for directions to the nearest gas station.
I cooked a delicious stew using calabash as one of the main ingredients.
I was hesitantly resistant about answering this, but decided to anyway.
you is the subject walk is the object
To write a sentence in reverse subject-verb order, put the verb before the noun. For example:For example:I saw a beautiful flower as I walked along the road.A beautiful flower I saw as I walked along the road.I hesitantly paid the extra bill.The extra bill I hesitantly paid.
Hesitantly He hesitantly raised his hand.
The word 'hesitantly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'hesitant'.An adverb is a word used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.Examples:Geraldine hesitantly opened the envelope with the report.Gregory gave hesitantly short answers to my questions.The dancer hesitantly gracefully moved across the stage.
The word hesitantly is an adverb. It means to do something in a hesitant manner.
penitently
Yes it is.
Hesitantly
shyly, carefully
You wouldn't use this word. The word you want is insecurely, meaning hesitantly or not securely. He held on insecurely, almost letting go. She felt her way insecurely.
The root word is hesitant.