Gallantly can only be an adverb.
Despite the odds George gallantly fought the dragon.
The cathedral rose gallantly above the city centre
Gallantly is an adverb, meaning that it is used to add description to a verb. e.g. the soldier ran forward gallantly to save his freinds.
The knight gallantly walked away.
nearly is the adverb of manner
As a modifier to the verb. Sentence: "The boy was running through traffic". Using the adverb "recklessly" as an adverb: "The boy was recklessly running through traffic".
Benign (harmless, inoffensive) is an adjective, not an adverb. A sentence using the adverb, benignly. "He smiled benignly at the bullies, knowing that he would have his revenge on them in a few hours."
You can't. There is no such word as "Glady".
Pages is not an adverb. Pages is a noun.Here is a sentence using pages: My book has 284 pages.
Correctly is the adverb in that sentence.
That sentence does not have an adverb.
The adverb form of greed is greedily.An example sentence using this word is: "he greedilysnatched the chocolate from his mother".
The adverb is "downstairs." *The clause "thinking the world was on fire" is an adverb clause using the participle thinking.
Subject of the sentence Verb of the sentence Adverb of Manner Adverb of Place Adverb of Frequency Adverb of time Purpose