No, it is not. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to crumble (to fall or break apart, into pieces). It can be a verb form, a participial, or an adjective (e.g. crumbled cheese).
No, "crumbly" is not an adverb. It is an adjective used to describe the texture of something that easily breaks into small pieces.
No. It is the present participle of the verb "ro crumble," It can be used as a verb, an adjective, or a noun (gerund).
Yes
no
The old pastries were so crumbly that they fell apart as soon as I picked them up.
The adverb for the word antisocial is antisocially.An example sentence is: "He always behaves antisocially when his parents are away".
The adverb for suspicious is suspiciously.
The word guilty is the adjective form of the noun guilt. The adverb form is guiltily.
The adverb form of "conviction" is "convincingly."
The old pastries were so crumbly that they fell apart as soon as I picked them up.
a biscuit is very crumbly.
I don't really know what your talking about because i have dogs myself and it's not crumbly. But if your talking about those cracks in them, it's normal. Our poo is probably crumbly too.
yes
I will give you a sentence with the words "crumbly Graham crackers" since "grahm crumbly crackers" is incorrect grammar. Sheila sighed. She really wished her son, Nathan, liked another treat. His crumbly Graham crackers were such a pain to clean up after he got them soggy in his mouth or crumbled them up to play with for fun.
Sandstone
Humus
It is crumbly
Max Crumbly Book 3, titled "The Midway to Midnight," was released on June 4, 2019.
yes yes yes! of course! search any recipe yes ofcourse,apple crumbly without apples is pointless.
crumbly, crunchy, firm, fresh
Soft & a Crumbly texture...