calmly
An adverb describes a verb, another adverb, an adjective, or a phrase.
No, an adverb describes a verb or an adjective. An adjective is the word that describes a noun.
The adverb "immediately" describes "when."
An adverb describes a verb, an adjective or another adverb.
Yes, the word calmly is an adverb.An example sentence is "she calmly walks away from the argument".
Calmly is an adverb.
calmly
calmly.
No, calmly is an adverb. The word calm is the adjective form, as used as a verb. Most words with the suffix -ly are adverbs. There are many adjectives that can be transformed to adverbs by adding the -ly suffix. For example, in the sentence "That runner is quick", the adjective quick describes the noun runner, but in the sentence "That runner runs quickly", the adverb quickly describes the verb runs. Be careful; there are exceptions (ally, lily, etc.).
No, the word calm is not an adverb.The adverb form of the word "calm" would be calmly.
An adverb describes a verb, another adverb, an adjective, or a phrase.
The word 'calmly' is none of the above, calmly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb. Examples:Mother calmly held out her hand for my cellphone, and she calmly locked it in her desk drawer. Then, speaking very calmly, she said, "Meet me here on Sunday when I will be unlocking this drawer."
An adverb describes a verb.
An adjective describes a verb, and an adverb describes a noun
No. An adjective describes a noun and an adverb describes a verb.
Calmly