Yes. Polite is an adjective, and politely as the adverb describing something that is done in a polite manner.
The word politely is indeed an adverb, yes.
An example sentence is "she politely asked for a drink".
Politely is!
Polite is an adjective. Politely is the adverb form. The closest one can get to a verb is to be polite.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective is just polite.
The adverb for the word polite would be politely. This means been nice to someone.
It is an adverb which means "in a manner that is not polite".
The adverb form of the word polite is politely.Some example sentences are:She politely asked for a glass of juice.You need to ask me politely.He politely held the door open for her.
No, it is not. The word "please" can be a verb (to oblige or make content), or as an adverb (polite addition).
The word polite is an adjective. It means to be well-mannered.
No, the word 'political' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as of or relating to the government or public affairs, for example, a political party, a political speech.The related noun form is politics.
Please may be an adverb (used in polite requests) or a verb meaning to satisfy or to oblige.
The comparative form of polite is more polite. The superlative form is most polite.
She was polite as she dismissed him. It is polite to hold the door for others.
What is the prefix for polite