No, it is not an adverb. Dirty is an adjective, where the adverb form is "dirtily."
The adverb is always, it is an adverb of frequency
The adverb of shy is shyly.
The adverb form of possess is possessively.
adverb from sing
No. It is the past tense of the verb 'to seem' (there is an adverb form, which is seemingly).
The only adverb that appears to be used is changeably, from the adjective changeable.There does not seem to be any formal word changingly.
It is an adverb of manner, although it usually describes not how something is done, but how it is being done, despite how it might seem.
The adverb, although it is rarely seen, is imaginarily. Much more common are the adjective form, imaginary, and the negative derivative adverb unimaginably.
It is "lively".
The word "liege" can be a noun or an adjective (meaning loyal). There does not seem to be an adverb form, but you could use a prepositional phrase instead.
"high" is the adverb because it describes how they climbed; i.e., it modifies the verb.
high
The adjectives made from augment are augmented, augmenting, augmentable, and (informally) augmentary.An adverb of the form augmentarily or augmentally or augmentedly does not seem to exist formally.
No, it is a noun. The suffix -ment gives you a clue.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective form is just seeming(apparent), the present participle of the verb to seem.
The word bully does not have a formal related adverb. Neither of the participial adjectives (bullying or bullied) has a recognized adverb form. Nor does the derivative adjective bullyable. The adverbial phrase "in a bullying manner" would seem to be the usual way to express this.