Spectacularly is the adverb form of spectacularwhich is the adjectival form of the noun spectacle
As in "He danced spectacularly."
Yes it is. It means impressive or thrilling, provided as a spectacle to viewers.
The adverb of spectacular is spectacularly.
An example sentence is: "the party was spectacularly entertaining".
No, the word "spectacular" is not an adverb.The adverb form of the word is spectacularly.
where is spectacular from?? where is spectacular from?? where is spectacular from??
spectacular's real name is (spectacular smith)
The word spectacular is an abstract noun; another abstract noun form is spectacularity. The word spectacular is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun; the adverb form is spectacularly, a word to modify a verb.
Her academic endeavors were spectacular in contrast to the mediocre performance of her peers .The view was spectacular from the top floor of the tallest building in Seattle.
No it isn't because an action verb is something that you do. You can't spectacular. You can be spectacular, but cannot do spectacular. It is an adjective.
Spectacular's birth name is Spectacular Blue Smith.
Spectacular is usually used as an adjective, so you can see pictures of spectacular things, or you can see a spectacular picture. If you're talking about spectacular as a noun, you'll need to specify which spectacular you're interested in.
spectacular
The word spectacular is both an adjective and an abstract noun. Examples:Adjective: We enjoyed a spectacular sunset from our balcony.Noun: It was a spectacular as big as a Hollywood production.
spectacular lives in Miami Florida
What a spectacular fireworks display that was.