dude, all i've been taught is if it ends in "ly", it's an adverb. So technecally, it's an adverb.
No, it is an adjective. The adverb form is beneficially.
adverb
Yes, you can change patience into an adverb. The adverb is "patiently."
No, it is not an adverb. Became is the past tense of the verb become.
Yes, it is an adverb. It is the adverb form of "ready" and means quickly and easily.
Usefully is an adverb.
Usefully....
He performed the task rather usefully! ( He did it well because he was skilled) The word useful is an adjective. Usefully is an adverb. The adjective can be converted to a noun by adding ness to it - usefulness which is used more commonly than the adverb.
No, it is not an adverb. Useful is an adjective and the adverb form is usefully.
There is no adverb form of the adjective "used" (employed, utilized). Adverbs would have to modify a verb, as with usably (from usable) and usefully (from useful) and uselessly (from useless).
Boring in holidays how it can utilise usefully?
Usefully : to good effect, beneficiallyExamples:"The long prybar can be employed usefully in many demolition activities.""His vacation was spent usefully, organizing the journals in his attic.""I came to the realization that there were certain public issues that were most usefully dealt with within some sort of framework of at least my private beliefs, if not my private life. (Anna Quindlen)"
Usefully.
Usefully, usefulness.
Usefully - meaning the act of being useful.Usefully, he had left driving directions and his cell phone number, just in case they were to get lost.This text book is usefully short; it makes it so easy to digest.
literary
"Fine" as an adverb and "good" as an exclamation and a noun are English equivalents of the Italian word bene. The adverb also may be rendered into English as "conveniently (really, surely, usefully, well)" while the noun also translates as "affection," "benefit," or "good deed" according to context. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "BEH-ney" in Italian.