Difficult is an adjective.
No. Difficult is an adjective. There is an adverb form, difficultly.
adverb
Adverb
The word muddy is an adjective. The adverb form (muddily) is very rarely used.
No, the word your is not an adverb. The word your is a possessive adjective (from the pronoun "you").
No. Difficult is an adjective. There is an adverb form, difficultly.
Difficult *is* an adjective. The noun is difficulty. There is no direct adverb form (the adverb phrase 'with difficulty' is normally used).
Paired, it is the superlative form of the adjective difficult. But separately, most is an adverb, while difficult is an adjective.
The word "difficultly" is the adverb form of the adjective.
Difficult - this is not a verb just an adverb (describing the verb to be). You can say for example 'I have a difficult job'
The word 'tightly' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb or an adjective. Example sentence: The spare tire was tightly jammed in the well and it was difficult to get out.
Dark can be an adjective or a noun. Darkly is an adverb.
The word hard can be either an adjective (hard rock) or an adverb (worked hard). The adverb 'hardly' usually has an entirely different connotation.
The definition of an adverb is words and phrases that describe or limit the meaning of a verb, an adjective,or a whole sentence. Adverbs answer the questions when, where, why, in what manner, or to what extent. An adverb is a adjective (usually ending in "ly"), that describes a verb. E.g: The boy ran Swiftly.
Adverb.Here is an adverb, not an adjective.
its an adverb an adjective is a descriptive word an adverb is a feeling
An adverb describes a verb, an adjective or another adverb.