Effortlessly or smoothly.
Add -ly onto the end to form the adverb "slowly."Or you could leave it alone. Slow can be used as an adverb in some cases, to mean slowly.(Walk slow around the elephants, as opposed to walk slowly, which could mean something else.)
"Communicate" or "converse" could be good alternatives to replace "talk".
No, "loud" is actually an adjective. Adverbs typically describe verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs in a sentence. If you want to describe how something is being done in a loud manner, you could use an adverb like "loudly" instead.
No, an idiom is a group of words with a figurative meaning different from its literal interpretation, while an adverb is a word that modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb. They serve different grammatical functions in a sentence.
I am bilingual and can speak English and Spanish fluently.
No, especially is an adverb. Pronouns are words use to replace nouns such as he, she, it, I, and me.
You could say "He smiled cunningly."
Technically, there isn't an adverb form of "panic". You could use "panically", but it's nonstandard.
'Sleet' is a noun and its related adjective is 'sleety'. You could argue that there is therefore an adverb 'sleetily', but in what context would you need to use it, and what would it mean?
The word "no" can be an adjective or adverb. It is also rarely a noun. As an interjection, it might also be considered an adverb. Adjective: We had no food and no water. Adverb: We could go no farther. The patient has gotten no better.* Noun: His answer was a firm no. Interjection: No, I won't go. * The adverb form is "not." The use of "no" as an adverb often includes examples where "not" would be used in a different construction (e.g. We could go no farther/ We could not go farther)
The word "liege" can be a noun or an adjective (meaning loyal). There does not seem to be an adverb form, but you could use a prepositional phrase instead.
Where may be used as a noun, adverb, or conjunction. "Where are you from?" (noun) "Where is the telephone?" (adverb) "I decide to go where no one could find me." (conjunction)
Depending on how you use it, the word "weakly" could be an adjective or an adverb. Because of his advanced years, he could only answer weakly.
Guilty is an adjective rather than an adverb. It describes a feeling of having done something wrong or being culpable. To use it as an adverb, you could say "He looked at her guiltily."
Adverb
Add -ly onto the end to form the adverb "slowly."Or you could leave it alone. Slow can be used as an adverb in some cases, to mean slowly.(Walk slow around the elephants, as opposed to walk slowly, which could mean something else.)
a light bulb