No. Nervously is an adverb. The adjective form is nervous(anxious, worried, jittery).
No, nervously is not an adjective.
The word nervously is an adverb.
The adjective of the word would be nervous.
No
the student answered the teacher's question nervously.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective is just "fresh."
The word nonsensical *is* an adjective. It is the adjective form of the noun nonsense.
The adjective is "scientific."
adjective
Nervous is an adjective. The adverb form is nervously.
No. Nervous is an adjective. The adverb form is nervously.
No, nervously is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb or an adjective. Example:John nervously announced that he'd asked Jane to marry him.
Yes, the word nervously is an adverb.
That is the correct spelling of the adverb "nervously."
Yes. I nervously approached the new student. Nervously describes the manner in which I approached the new student.
I was shaking nervously when a test arrived at my desk.
the student answered the teacher's question nervously.
Nervously, as it is describing walked, which is the verb in the sentence.
Here are 2 examples:He was glancing nervously at his teacher.Why were you glancing nervously at me?
She spoke nervously, stumbling over her words and avoiding eye contact.
anxiously