No, it is the present participle of "to sing" and may be a verb, noun (gerund), or adjective (e.g. singing carolers).
Parallelism ~ Apex ~
Singing is singing. And if its a fast kind of talk of singing its most probably a rap.
tunefully is the adverb, most tunefully the superlative. She sang most tunefully
Yes, it is an adverb, the adverb form of the adjective musical.
I am singing. You/we/they are singing. He/she/it is singing.
It's an adjective referring to the noun 'singing'. (Singing is not a verb in this usage.) The adverb would be 'deliciously'.
Yes, the adverb is melodiously. It gives some idea how the choir was singing.
tonight
"I am not singing that loud" is correct. Loud is both an adjective and an adverb. As an adverb, it is preferred over the suffixed adverbial form "loudly" with verbs of singing or speaking. "I am not singing that loudly" is not incorrect in formal writing, but in speech it is stilted. It is a important to remember that not all adverbs end in -ly, and many are indistinguishable from their adjectival counterparts.
No, voice is a noun (a voice) and a verb (to voice).
Epstein and Christina went to tuition merrily by singing songs.
AdverbExample: She sings abnormally. (abnormally being the adverb, modifying sings)Example: Her singing is surprisingly abnormal. (surprisingly being the adverb, modifying abnormal, which is an adjective)adverbAn adverb usually modifies a verb, but can sometimes modify an adjective.
AdverbExample: She sings abnormally. (abnormally being the adverb, modifying sings)Example: Her singing is surprisingly abnormal. (surprisingly being the adverb, modifying abnormal, which is an adjective)adverbAn adverb usually modifies a verb, but can sometimes modify an adjective.
Yes - an adverb describes how something is done. eg: How did she speak? She spoke loudly.
The word curious is an adjective, along with nasal, as both modify "voice."
Not really. An adverb is a word that describes a verb: ie. strongly swimming, loudly singing, heavilydrinking.You might stretch that category to include honor, ie. honor killing, but it is pretty tenuous (in that example, honor is a noun rather than a verb).
AdverbExample: She sings abnormally. (abnormally being the adverb, modifying sings)Example: Her singing is surprisingly abnormal. (surprisingly being the adverb, modifying abnormal, which is an adjective)adverbAn adverb usually modifies a verb, but can sometimes modify an adjective.