Spanish adverbs are typically formed by taking the feminine form of an adjective and adding the suffix -mente. For example, "rápido" (fast) becomes "rápidamente" (quickly). This is a common way to form adverbs that describe how actions are performed.
Yes, "strongly" is an adverb. Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs to provide information about how something is done.
No, "knowledgeable" is not a prefix. It is an adjective formed by adding the suffix "-able" to the noun "knowledge."
No, "sunnier" is not a suffix. It is a comparative form of the adjective "sunny," formed by adding the comparative suffix "-ier."
You can make "flexible" into a noun by adding the suffix "-ity" to create "flexibility."
The adjective formed from "shack" is "shabby."
Yes, "strongly" is an adverb. Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs to provide information about how something is done.
Many adverbs are formed by adding -LY to an adjective form (patient-patiently, dutiful-dutifully), but not all words ending in -LY are adverbs. *When an adjective ends in Y, such as happy or sleepy, the Y is changed to i before adding -LY : happily, sleepily.
A large number are formed by adding -LY to the adjective form:bare - barelyodd - oddlyweird - weirdlypitiful - pitifullyor replacing E with Y :simple - simplyable - ablyor changing Y to I and adding LY:happy - happilyhasty - hastily
Those formed by adjectives. Spanish adjectives can be adverbs: Iba lento --- He was going slowly Canta bonito --- He sings nicely
No it is not. It is an adverb, formed by adding -LY to the adjective anxious.
Sympathetically is an adverb. Adverbs describe verbs (he walked quickly), adjectives (He drove a very fast car) or other adverbs (she sang quite loudly). Quickly, fast, quite and loudly are all adverbs. Many adverbs in English are formed by adding -ly to adjectives, eg quick/quickly, beautiful/beautifully.Example sentence: She sympathetically asked how I was since my mother's death.Sympathetic is an adjective, sympathy is a noun and sympathise is a verb
No. The word "am" is a form of the verb "to be" (I am). Other forms are: "is", "are", "was", "were" Adverbs describe/modify verbs, adjectives and other adverbs. They are usually formed by adding "-ly" to an adjective form (e.g., quietly, greatly) to describe the manner in which something is done. They also describe place and time (e.g., always, here), answering the questions How, When, or Where. Adverbs can modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs.
Adverbs are often formed by adding -LY to the adjective form. However, not all modifiers ending in -LY are adverbs. Examples: high -> highly close -> closely huge -> hugely Adjectives that end in -LY : friendly, lively, lovely, silly, ugly Can be adjectives or adverbs: early, daily, weekly, monthly
No. Tentatively is an adverb formed from the adjective tentative by adding -ly.
The noun form of the adjective is formed by adding the suffix -ness.The noun form is eloquentness.
Most common adverbs are formed by adding the suffix -ly. Quickly, softly, gently, kindly, stupendously, etc.
No, the ending -ly is much more common with adverbs than adjectives. Often adverbs are formed by adding -ly to an adjective, for example: * happy - happily * fortunate - fortunately * recent - recently * new - newly * slow - slowly A few adjectively, like elderly, end in -ly, but it is not common.