The adverb of cheerful is cheerfully.
An example sentence is: "the team cheerfully celebrated the goal".
cheerfully
Yes. It is an adverb. The adjective form is cheerful.
Epstein and Christina went to tuition merrily by singing songs.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective is simply "cheerful" (happy, full of cheer).
The superlative of cheerful is "most cheerful."
more cheerful, most cheerful
Yes. It is an adverb. The adjective form is cheerful.
No, it is not. It is a verb form, the past tense and past participle of the verb "to cheer."
Quickly is the adverb."The lion tamer quickly jumped out of the cage."
Epstein and Christina went to tuition merrily by singing songs.
Both are correct, but "she is also cheerful" is more commonly used. The position of the adverb "also" can vary in a sentence, so both versions are grammatically acceptable.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective is simply "cheerful" (happy, full of cheer).
Quickly is an adverb. e.g. "He pedaled quickly on his bike." The other three are all adjectives.
It's not an adverb at all, but an adjective! "You look cheerful!"The adverbial form is "cheerfully", or, to be colourful, "cheerily". "He grinned cheerfully at the crowd."Cheerfully is an adverb of manner as it tells us how the verb is done or happens.
The superlative of cheerful is "most cheerful."
Everyone is cheerful.
more cheerful, most cheerful
Here are sentences with CHEERFUL in it:When I was at the game the people were very cheerful. :)The team was cheerful.I was cheerful after I heard we won the game!Why are people cheerful when something goes good or there way? :)