The adverb form is "obediently."
The adverb for "obey" would be "obediently."
Correctly
Obey is present tense. I/We/You/They obey He/She/It obeys
Honor and obey your father and your mother.
The noun forms of the verb to obey are obedience, and the gerund, obeying.
The past tense of obey is obeyed.
No, there is no modern adverb with the ending LEY
The adverb form is obediently.
The adjective is other and the adverb is willingly.
Obsequious means overly submissive; too eager to obey or comply. Obsequiously is the adverb form which refers to doing something in an overly submissive way.
The verb is merely, obey. I obey, you obey, he, she, it obeys. One may be obedient to someone, but one does not "obey to" someone.
Obey is a verb. Obey means "to do as told".Example:Soldiers should obey orders.
Obey is present tense. I/We/You/They obey He/She/It obeys
There is dis obey the prefix here is dis because it comes right before obey. You can use Re obey because you can obey someone another time for the same thing maybe. But everybody knows that you can use dis obey and maybe re obey Onother person: Prefixes can be dis-obey
Yes, obey the laws and obey them well.
Obey Kelly
extension to obey
Pareo, parere - to obey.
The word "obey" is a verb (obey, obeys, obeying, obeyed), there is no plural.