carefully painted, quickly painted, slowly painted.
The adverb is skillfully.
There is no adverb: the entire phrase beginning with "that's" is the object of the verb "think." (you think that)
Busily is the adverb of busy.An example sentence is: "the beaver busily built the dam".Another example is: "Fred is busily painting the portrait".
Yes, the word upstairs is an adverb. It is also an adjective and a noun.An example sentence is: "he is painting the hallway upstairs".Click here to see upstairs in a dictionary..
No, the word 'yet' is an adverb and a conjunction.Examples:They haven't yet finished the street repair. (modifies the verb 'haven't finished')The painting was strange yet appealing. (connects additional information to the initial statement)
Later. Adverbs add information about the verb, in this sentence later tells us when Anna began painting.
No. Kind is an adjective or a noun, depending on which form of the word you are using. Noun Example: That painting is one of a kind. Adjective Example: You are so kind.
Ah, pang abay in English is called an adverb. It's a word that describes or gives more information about a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Just like how a happy little cloud can enhance the beauty of a painting, adverbs can add depth and detail to a sentence.
One adjective for the word serve is servile, which has connotations of weak and controlled. The adverb form would be servilely. There is no adverb form of the adjective servable, but the adjective serviceable has the adverb form serviceably.
There is no direct adverb for create, although the participles act as adjectives (created, creating).However, the derivative adjective creative (which means something different) does have an adverb form (creatively).
1. Adverb Of Time2. Adverb Of Place3. Adverb Of Manner4. Adverb Of Degree of Quantity5. Adverb Of Frequency6. Interrogative Adverb7. Relative Adverb
No, 'craftily' isn't a verb. Verbs tell you what something is doing, like 'run', 'eat' and 'talk'. 'Craftily' is an adverb. An adverb is used together with a verb and it tells you *how* something is doing what it's doing. For example:'He runs fast.' ('fast' is the adverb there.)'I eat slowly. ' ('slowly' is the adverb.)Or:'Tom craftily tricked his friends into painting his Aunt Polly's fence for him.'('craftily' is the adverb, it tells you what Tom's tricking was like.)Adverbs are usually, but not always, made by adding -ly (or -ily) to the end of an adjective. For example:slow - slowlyquiet - quietlynoisy - noisily