Neither word is an adverb. Making is the present participle of to make, here used as a participial noun with the object noun friends.
The adverb in "He arrived home yesterday" is 'yesterday'. In this case, 'yesterday' is describing 'when', making it an adverb.
In the sentence "My friends came because it was my birthday," the adverb is "because." It introduces the reason for their coming, providing additional context to the action.
no it is a noun and a verb
The adverb form of the word "frequent" is frequently.An example sentence for you is: "he was frequently making bullying remarks about his classmates".
No. Friends is a plural noun, with the adjective form friendly, which might rarely be used as an adverb, as opposed to the awkward for "friendlily." It is easier to use a prepositional phrase such as "in a friendly way."
AaronJDavis1 loves making friends.
No, bitterly modifies a verb making it an adverb.
consistent = adjective example sentence: She is making consistent progress. consistently = adverb example: Her scores are consistently improving.
No, it is not an adverb. Makes is a form of the verb "to make."
Making Friends was created on 1997-08-26.
The secret of making friends is the ability to talk freely. If you are comfortable with being extrovert, you can have lots of friends.
The suffix is -ly (making this an adverb) Just fyi. XD