The adverb form of general is generally. This (adding -ly) is a common way to form an adverb from an adjective.
The adverb form of general is generally. This (adding -ly) is a common way to form an adverb from an adjective.
Adding -ly to the adjective general creates the adverb generally.
adverb
No. Theater is a noun (a movie house, or drama in general).The adverb form would be theatrically (in a dramatic form).
It's an adverb because it modifies a verb, such as "She walked carefully." A general rule: If a word ends in "ly," it's probably an adverb.
The adverb form pinkly is rarely used, and means "in a pink manner" (suggesting a color change). Another less recognized adverb form is "pinkishly" (which has the same general meaning).
That is the correct spelling of the adverb "broadly" (widely, or in general terms).
No. Everywhere is an adverb (in all places). It cannot be a preposition.
Eva Engels has written: 'Optimizing adverb positions' -- subject(s): Comparative and general Grammar, Word order, Adverb
Yes, it can indicate the general location as in "stand by" or "the car raced by." But it is more often a preposition.
The general difference between an Adjective that describes a noun, and its Adverb form that describes a verb (i.e. or rather, the action named by the verb) is the adverb-suffix "'''ly'''".
It depends in what type of sentence its in but in general no.