The anagram is "dented" but it is an adjective.
No, it is not. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb, to tend. It is rarely used as an adjective.
No, it is not an adverb. The conjugation "will make" is the future tense of the verb "to make".
Add "ly" to make it an adverb.
The verb 'tend' has two adjective forms, tended and tending. Neither has a formal adverb. Some adverbs that might describe the verb 'tend' are: carefully carelessly repeatedly seldom randomly diligently attentively inattentively watchfully frequently occasionally
You add the letters -ly. The adverb form is narrowly.
No, healthy is an adjective. However, you can make healthy into an adverb by adding -ily. So the adverb would be "healthily."
As your question indicates, "entirely" is an adverb; it doesn't need an additional suffix.
frist that does not make sense and to figure out what a adverb isnt is to think of what a adverb is so a adverb is what somthing did for example my new dog was JUMPING and RUNNING.
Happily is an adverb.
Hard is an adverb in the sentence. The word hard does not require 'ly' to make it an adverb
The adverb would be shyly.Shyly, I asked the boy out on a date.
sometimes