That is the correct spelling of "suspiciously" (suggesting or inspiring doubt or distrust).
this is a hard question...
I'll have to think about it...
yeah really really hard...
Suspiciously is an adverb. John viewed the picture suspiciously for signs of tampering.
Suspiciously is an adverb, yes.Some example sentences are:He suspiciously stuffed the bags into a nearby hedge.The man was taken aside by police for behaving suspiciously.
The word 'suspiciously' is not a noun. The word 'suspiciously' is the adverb for of the adjective 'suspicious'. The noun forms are suspiciousness and suspicion.
The base word is spelled suspicious. You can add "-ly" for suspiciously. You can add "un-" for unsuspicious. But I don't think that "unsuspiciously" is a true word.
Yes, suspiciously is an adverb. It means in a manner causing suspicion.
There he mingled with the revellers, and walked slowly onward, seeking suspiciously and anxiously for his vanished favorite.Silas Peckham slanted his eye up suspiciously at the Doctor, as if he was getting some kind of advantage over him.Charles gazed suspiciously around the small, neat room.
suspiciously
The adverb for suspicious is suspiciously.
I called the police after seeing two men walking around my neighbors house suspiciously.
The root word for suspicious is suspect.
doubtfully, uncertainly
Suspiciously, distrustfully, doubtfully.