Behaved is not an adverb, no.
The word behaved is in fact a verb.
unpleasantly: She behaved unpleasantly.
Yes, because it IS an adverb. Such as in, "He behaved badly during the movie".
No, it is not. Unruly is an adjective meaning badly behaved, hostile, or quarrelsome.
The word "honour" can be a noun (he behaved with honour) a verb (they honour him for his valour)
The abstract noun form for the adjective rude is rudeness.
Most Behaved is the correct one because it should be in the superlative degree of adjective. Behaved is a verbal adjective. If we use behave it is a verb not an adjective.
Yes.
Behaved. Fred was told he had behaved perfectly.
The comparative form of both good and well is better His first book was better. (adj) We'll play better next time. (adv)The superlative form of both good and well is best Who is the best singer? (adj) You can use brown or white sugar, but brown works best. (adv)betterwell better bestThe kids all behaved well. The older kids behaved better. The senior kids behaved best.
my brother behaved badly with me
"He behaved with me as with his sister" meaning "he behaved with me as he behaved with his sister". It is a connector and it joins two sentences to express a comparison, it is followed by a noun or a noun phrase. It is the same as saying "he behaved with me similarly to the way he did with his sister".
Yes!