Nibbled means "small bites" and daintily mean "delicately". Those two words don't mean the same, but daintily eating would be nibbling.
"daintily" is the adverb for 'delicately beautiful' or 'charming'
The word "daintily" is an adverb. It describes how something is done, in a delicate or refined manner.
You wrote your question so harshly but I answered it so daintily.
No it is not. Nibbled is a verb. It is the past tense form of the verb "nibble".
No. Depending on the context, it is a verb or adjective. For example, in "I nibbled on a biscuit", "nibbled" is a verb. Whereas "the nibbled biscuit" makes "nibbled" an adjective on the state of the biscuit. A noun is " a person, a place or a thing". Nibbled doesn't really fit into any of these categories.
Yes, the base word of "daintily" is "dainty," which means delicately small or pretty. "Daintily" is the adverb form of "dainty" and describes how something is done delicately or with elegance.
The word daintily is an adverb. It means to do something in a dainty manner.
She very daintily walked through the garden. Another good example sentence for this word is, the little girl daintily danced around like a ballerina.
I told my friend to daintily pick the cup up beacause it was really fragile.
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