Yes, gracefully is an adverb, from the adjective graceful.
No. Graceful is an adjective. The adverb form is gracefully.
The superlative is most gracefully.Almost all adverbs that are not also adjectives (e.g. fast, high), and all that end in -LY, form the comparative and superlative using the words "more" and "most."
No, it is an adjective. The adverb form is beneficially.
adverb
No, it is not an adverb. Became is the past tense of the verb become.
"Gracefully" is an adverb. It is used to describe how an action is performed.
No. Graceful is an adjective. The adverb form is gracefully.
Gracefully.
Only verbs have past tenses, and the word "gracefully" is an adverb. I walk gracefully, I walked gracefully, I am going to walk gracefully; the word gracefully does not change.
Gracefully is an adverb.
she dance gracefully
It is an adverb.Graceful is its translation into an adjective.
'Gracefully'. Adverbs almost always end in "ly".
Gracefully is either and neither until it is compared to another word. If I wrote gauchly that would be an antonym of gracefully If I type elegantly, that could be a synonym for gracefully.
( Glinda danced gracefully. ) is a simple sentence. It is not a question, but a statement. It is not a command. The sentence has an adverb that describes how Glinda danced.
Graceful is an adjective used to describe a noun. It was a graceful performance. Gracefully would be an adverb, describing a verb. She danced gracefully.
Gracefully, as in: "Ash stepped gracefully upon the chair, while Lily missed the seat altogether, and stepped into a pit of blackness." I'm sorry if that sentence makes no sense - here's a better one: "The ballerina spun gracefully upon one leg, the other extended straight behind her."