No, anxiously is an adverb.
The word 'anxiously' is not a noun, it is an adverb, a word to modify a verb; for example:We anxiously strained to see the grades that were being posted.The boy sat waiting anxiously for the doctor with the hypodermic.The noun forms are anxiousness and anxiety.
I anxiously walk into my new job.
He anxiously awaited the decision on his admission to the college. The nearby residents anxiously observed the rising water in the creek.
He anxiously awaited the results of the test.
YES!!! In the English language 99% of adverbs end in '---ly'.
Anxiously is an adverb because it refers to how someone does something, e.g. "During the exam, the class watched the clock anxiously."
The word 'anxiously' is not a noun, it is an adverb, a word to modify a verb; for example:We anxiously strained to see the grades that were being posted.The boy sat waiting anxiously for the doctor with the hypodermic.The noun forms are anxiousness and anxiety.
My is a possessive adjective. Anxiously is an adverb modifying the verb waited. The is an article. (By the oven is an adverb prepositional phrase.)
I anxiously walk into my new job.
anxiously, tensely
You would use the word anxiously to describe how someone was feeling.For Example:She sat anxiously in the waiting room.He wrote his answer down anxiously.
The word anxious is an adjective, a word that describes a noun, such as an anxious parent. The adverb form is anxiously; the noun form is anxiousness. There is no verb form.
He anxiously awaited the decision on his admission to the college. The nearby residents anxiously observed the rising water in the creek.
The word is spelled anxiously. Anxious is the base word and "-ly" is the suffix.
He anxiously awaited the results of the test.
I am waiting anxiously for the buss to come at the bus stop.
YES!!! In the English language 99% of adverbs end in '---ly'.