No, generously is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb; for example:
He generously donated a lot of his time to the project.
The cake was generously frosted with buttercream and strawberries. It was delicious.
Note: a pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence or phrase. The word 'it' in the sentence above is a pronoun taking the place of the noun cake.
No, generously is an adverb, a word that describes a verb or an adjective. Example:He generously gave his time and him money to the cause.
The word 'generously' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Example:He generously gave his time.
No, it's an adverb. It is describing how you are doing something, not what you are doing. You don't generously; you generously do it.
yes it is a verb No it is an adverb generously adv : in a generous manner; "he gave generously to several charities"
Generously means to do or say something generously. Here's an example:"Diane van Deren has used her gift generously, helping not only herself but many others along the way."
Generously is an adverb. The adjective form is just generous.
Yes. For ex. The man generously gave the poor man a loaf of bread. "Generously" is describing how the man gave the loaf of bread. So yes.
Generously means to do or say something generously. Here's an example:"Diane van Deren has used her gift generously, helping not only herself but many others along the way."
Generously means to do or say something generously. Here's an example:"Diane van Deren has used her gift generously, helping not only herself but many others along the way."
Generously means to do or say something generously. Here's an example:"Diane van Deren has used her gift generously, helping not only herself but many others along the way."
Generously means to do or say something generously. Here's an example:"Diane van Deren has used her gift generously, helping not only herself but many others along the way."
ambitiously