No. The word bitterly is an adverb.
No, bitterly modifies a verb making it an adverb.
Bitterly is not a noun, it is an adverb, a word that describes a verb.
A sentence with a subject, intransitive verb, and an adverb is:Lorelei complained bitterly.
Yes, "bitterly" is an adverb. It modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb to indicate that something is done in a bitter or resentful manner. For example, "She cried bitterly when she heard the news."
The adverb form of the adjective bitter is bitterly--a bitterly ironic situation.Most of the time, -ly can be added to adjectives to create adverbs.
She told the truth; albeit bitterly.
The opposite of the adverb bitterly is sweetly.The word sweetly is also an adverb.
Today, he talked to me meanly and bitterly.
Amare is Latin for "to love."It's also a passive singular imperative of the same verb, meaing "be loved!"Coincidentally, it's also an adverb meaning "bitterly," or a vocative meaning "O bitter one."(This means that amare amare amare could be translated "Be bitterly loved, O bitter one!")
The president bitterly denounced the critics of his health care proposals.
The doorman complained bitterly about the noise coming from the neighbors' party late at night.
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