Helpfully is the adverb of help.
An example sentence is: "he helpfully washes the dishes".
One adjective for the noun and verb help is "helpful" which has the adverb helpfully and the comparative form "more helpfully."
An adverb
One adjective for the noun and verb help is "helpful" which has the adverb helpfully and the comparative form "more helpfully."
Only as part of an infinitive phrase. The term "to help" can form noun, adjective, or adverb phrases, e.g. "They had been toiling for years to help the displaced natives."
Merely is an adverb, yes.Some example sentences are:I am merely just browsing.He is merely trying to help.
I believe on a scale of 1-10 8, an adverb points out, Where-How-When, and how much. That might help you.
There is no adverb in the sentence, "Fred brought home a baby tiger for Helen to help." If you need an adverb, then you could write "Fred *carefully* brought home a baby tiger for Helen to help."
Adverbs help verbs in a sentence.
No. Help is a noun or verb. A related adverb would be "helpfully."(the adverb helpingly is virtually never used)
The phrase "help you" consists of a verb ("help") and a pronoun ("you"). "Help" functions as a verb in this context, indicating an action, while "you" serves as the object of that action. Neither "help" nor "you" is a noun, adjective, or adverb in this particular phrase.
The word helped is the past tense and past participle of to help, and can be an adjective. But the most useful adverb is "helpfully."
Simply is the adverb form of simple.Some example sentences are:Simply add the milk into the cake mix.He is simply trying to help.