''Shut up!'' the teacher shouted harsly.
The King's royal retinue was treated harshly.
"Don't touch that!" the angry man growled harshly.
he is a traitor. Traitors are punished very harshly.
The teacher speaks harshly with everybody.
You wrote your question so harshly but I answered it so daintily.
To castigate is to harshly tell someone off. An example of a sentence using the word castigate is: I saw her mom castigate her publicly after she knocked down all the cans off the shelf at the store.
"Malighed" isn't a word. However, you may mean "maligned," which is when someone or something is spoken about harshly or critically. For example: "The newspaper was maligned for its story about the mayor."
Oppression means to dominate harshly. An example sentence would be: His oppression made everyone watching very upset and very uncomfortable.
The comparative form of "harshly" is "more harshly."
No, "harshly" is an adverb. It describes how an action is done.
Yes, harshly is an adverb.Some example sentences using this word are:The judges harshly criticised his performance.She harshly scolded her child.
The merciful king looked with kindness upon his subjects. A merciful god doesn't punish followers harshly.