No, it is not. The word excite is a verb (to excite, to stimulate, to arouse).
No. Exciting is an adjective. The adverb would be "excitingly."
Exciting is not an adverb, no.
Exciting is actually an adjective.
Excitingly would be the adverb form.
no it isn't
The word excited in that sentence is not an adverb but an adjective because it describes the subject. An adverb desrcribes an adjective, verb or another adverb.
very is an adverb (technically an adverb clause = adverb+adjective) in this sentence, excited is an adjective that's being modified by the word very.
The word "exited" means "departed" or "left" -- there is no adverb form. The similar word "excited" has the adverb form "excitedly" -- in an excited or enthusiastic manner.
excitedly
The adverb is 'too'.
The word excited in that sentence is not an adverb but an adjective because it describes the subject. An adverb desrcribes an adjective, verb or another adverb.
very is an adverb (technically an adverb clause = adverb+adjective) in this sentence, excited is an adjective that's being modified by the word very.
The word "exited" means "departed" or "left" -- there is no adverb form. The similar word "excited" has the adverb form "excitedly" -- in an excited or enthusiastic manner.
excitedly
No. Excitedly is. An adverb is a word that describes a verb.
The adverb is 'too'.
Too
Too
The word initially is indeed an adverb, yes.An example sentence is:We were initially very excited about the trip.
So
Yes, it is an adverb, meaning in an excited manner.
No, you do not need a hyphen for "overly excited", even if it precedes whatever it modifies. For example, "Gus worked himself into an overly excited state whenever the discussion was about politics." The hyphen is not necessary because the -ly suffix in the adverb "overly" makes it clear that it modifies "excited".