Yes, the word nervously is an adverb.
Tremble, shuffle, twitch, fidget
There is no adverb form of the adjective elephantine.
There is no adverb form of the word puppies.This is because the word puppies is a noun.
The adverb of disgust is disgustingly.An example sentence is: "he disgustingly ate the rotten frog".
No, it is not an adverb. The word wagged is a past tense verb.
The adverb of nervous is nervously.
Nervous is an adjective. The adverb form is nervously.
That is the correct spelling of the adverb "nervously."
The adverb for "nervous" is "nervously."
The adverb form of "nervous" is "nervously."
No, "nervously" is not a pronoun. It is an adverb that describes how something is done or the manner in which an action is performed.
Nervously, as it is describing walked, which is the verb in the sentence.
No. Nervously is an adverb. The adjective form is nervous(anxious, worried, jittery).
No. Nervous is an adjective. The adverb form is nervously.
It doesn't have a tense as it's an adverb.
Firstly, "nervousness" is more properly written as "nerves," and secondly, as an adverb is a word that modifies a verb, nervously is the answer to your question.
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.