Well you can make up something that doesn't really make sense, like " I was talking to this person and they started (something, eg shaking) awkwardly. It's really just a descriptive word.
My friend tried awkwardly to dance. The football player landed awkwardly on his shoulder, dislocating it.
The adverb is awkwardly. It means in an awkward, inexperienced, or uncoordinated manner.
The baby giraffe's first steps brought her ever so awkwardly to her mother. The young boxer's awkwardly delivered punch suddenly ended the match.
"This question is very awkwardly worded..."
Yes. Awkward is an adjective. Adding "ly" to most adjectives results in an adverb. You can test this in a sentence. "She stood awkwardly." Since "awkwardly" defines the way she is completing the action (verb), it is an adverb.
There is no prefix for awkwardly. The suffix of awkwardly is -ly.
A phrase or clause placed awkwardly in a sentence so that it appears to modify or refer to an unintended word.
The gangly teenager awkwardly shuffled across the room, his limbs appearing disproportionately long and ungainly.
The manual menu in the restrant was awkwardly concave.
Sprawl
gracefully
No, the word 'awkwardly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'awkward'.The noun form of the adjective 'awkward' is awkwardness.