No, it is not. Meticulous is an adjective, and the adverb form is meticulously.
No, it is an adverb. It is the adverb form of the adjective thorough (complete, detailed, meticulous).
No, it is not. Meticulously (carefully, painstakingly) is the adverb form of the adjective meticulous.
The word meticulous is an adjective. It means to be very precise.
The word "meticulously" is an adverb and does not have a plural form because adverbs do not typically have pluralized versions. If you are referring to the adjective "meticulous," its plural form when used to describe multiple subjects would be "meticulous" as well, since adjectives in English do not change form based on plurality.
as a adjective or an adverb: 1) his work was very meticulous-adjective because it is describing his work 2) he worked meticulously on his project-adverb because it it describing his working
more meticulous, most meticulous
meticulous= careful with all details, detail oriented
Jerry is so meticulous about cleaning his room.
He had always been so meticulous about his appearance. He was meticulous about his grooming. Judy was so meticulous about scrubbing the floors, friends joked that her kitchen was cleaner than a hospital. By being meticulous in the scientific methods used, the lab technician prevented cross-contamination between biological samples. George was meticulous in decorating the cake so the lettering was perfect.
That is the correct spelling of "meticulous" (attending to detail).
The word meticulous is an adjective (painstaking, detailed) not a noun, so it has no plural.
No. Fastidious is exceedingly tidy Meticulous is an attention to detail, careful