No the word mysteriously is not a noun. It is an adverb.
mysteriously. mysteriously.
no, it's an adjective because it can describe a noun. mysteriously can describe a verb or other adverb, so it's an adverb.
Mysteriously is an adverb.
The word mysteriously is already an adverb. You can't have an adverb of an adverb.Some example sentences are:The passport mysteriously vanished.She is mysteriously creepy but insanely cute.
The old man was mysteriously happy. Her puppy is mysteriously sick. The police were still trying to investigate the mysteriously sudden death.
The colonists who settled Roanoke Island mysteriously disappeared.
After my watch mysteriously disappeared, I tried to find out what happened to it, but to no avail.
The colonists who settled Roanoke Island mysteriously disappeared.
The child mysteriously disappeared while walking home from school.He died mysteriously and the family requests an autopsy.An image of St. Rose appeared mysteriously on the stone wall.In a Show called, "Pretty Little Liars", there is a girl named Allison who mysteriously gets kidnapped in the night when her other four friends, Arya, Spencer, Emily, and Hanna are sleeping.The newborn giraffe mysteriously disappeared from its cage at the zoo.
-adjective 1. produced by or as if by magic: The change in the appearance of the room was magical. 2. mysteriously enchanting: a magical night. 3. of or pertaining to magic.
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mysteriously