some ly words that are not adverbs are
ally
anomaly, apply, assembly, belly, bely, bodily, bubbly, bully, burly, chilly, comely, comply, costly, courtly, cuddly, curly, daily, dally, dastardly, deadly, deathly, disorderly, doily, dolly, dragonfly, early, family, fly, friendly, frilly, ghastly, goodly, gravelly, grisly, gully, heavenly, hilly, holly, holy, homely, homily, hourly, imply, jelly, jolly, kindly, leisurely, likely, lily, lively, lonely, lovely, lowly, mannerly, mealy, measly, melancholy, monopoly, monthly, multiply, nightly, oily, only, orderly, pearly, pebbly, ply, rally, rarely, rely, reply, scaly, shapely, sickly, silly, sly, smelly, sprightly, squiggly, stately, steely, supply, supply, surly, tally, timely, ugly, unlikely, weekly, wily, wobbly, wooly, worldly, wrinkly, yearly
quickly
slowly
friendly
lovely
really
wonderfully
angrily
happily
frequently
Words in English which end in -ly are usually adverbs, e.g. quickly, stupidly, clumsily, hesitantly.
Flat adverbs
sadly
Yes. Nearly anything that ends with the suffix "-ly" is an adjective.
Yes, adverbs can modify adjectives.
No, it is an adverb. Any words with -ly are an adverb.
The word leisure is a noun and an adjective. By adding the -ly to the end, it becomes an adverb, a word that modifies a verb or an adjective. Example use of the adverb:We leisurely ate our lunch in the park before returning to work.
Like most words that end in -ly (but not all!) the word wisely is an adverb.
The part of speech that most often ends in -ly is an adverb. However, this does not mean either that (1) every word that ends in -ly is an adverb or (2) all adverbs end in -ly.
finally lastly
Any word that ends in "ly" is an adverb.
The word slowly ends in -ly, so it is an adverb.
There was no word found that means burn and ends in ly. Other words that can describe burn include char, scald, scorch, ignite, heat, torch, cremate, incinerate, and roast.
Yes. Nearly anything that ends with the suffix "-ly" is an adjective.
Real>really, royal>royally, loyal>loyally
No, it's not. Any descriptive word that ends in "ly" is an adverb. "Loving" is an adjective.
no
Words ending in an unpronounced "e" omit the "e" when forming the adverbial "LY" form, most notably "true" becoming "truly". (Similarly, the Americanized version of "judgment" removes an unpronounced "e")
anomaly has to suffix. even though it ends it ly, it does not represent the meaning of that suffix.
Call.