No, it is not. It is the adverb form of the adjective hurried, which is the past participle of to hurry.
Hurriedly is an adjective of manner. It tells how an action was performed (in this case, in a hurried or hasty manner).
This sentence is a common subject verb object sentence, where the adjective describes the object. In this sentence, the adjective spare describes the desk, telling the reader what kind of desk it is.
Hurriedly is the adverb of hurry.An example sentence is: "he hurriedly answered the last test question before the time ran out".
Yes, it is. It means in a quick, hurried or hasty manner.
more happily, more quickly
The adjective in "She sat down hurriedly at the spare desk", is the word "spare", describing the noun desk.
Hurriedly is an adjective of manner. It tells how an action was performed (in this case, in a hurried or hasty manner).
"Spare" and "The"
The adverb form of the adjective hurried is hurriedly.(Hurried is the past tense and past participle of to hurry, and can be used as an adjective.)
This sentence is a common subject verb object sentence, where the adjective describes the object. In this sentence, the adjective spare describes the desk, telling the reader what kind of desk it is.
No. It's a noun or a verb (to rush). One adverb form is "hurriedly ."
Hastily is already an adverb, the adverb form of the adjective hasty. Synonyms are quickly or hurriedly.
My apologies for having hurriedly written this answer.
Perhaps I've answered too hurriedly.
Yes, it is. It means in a quick, hurried or hasty manner.
Hurriedly is the adverb of hurry.An example sentence is: "he hurriedly answered the last test question before the time ran out".
No, the word hurriedly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb. Example:We hurriedly dressed so we wouldn't miss the bus.Mom hid the gifts hurriedly when she heard the kids stirring.