More noisily
The comparative adverb form of "noisily" is "more noisily."
The adverb form of noisy is noisily.
No, "noisily" is not a verb. It is an adverb that describes how an action is performed, for example, "She talked noisily."
The comparative form of the adverb "often" is "more often."
The word "noisily" is an adverb. It is used to describe how an action is carried out.
Yes it is.It depicts the way you do somethingor in other words it modifies a verb.
The adverb form of noisy is noisily.
Yes, the word 'noisy' is an adjective, referring to making a lot of noise. For example: "He was a very noisy child." However, if you use the word 'noisily' it becomes an adverb. For example: "He did the dishes noisily."
The word 'noisily' is the adverb form of the noun noise.
No, "noisily" is not a verb. It is an adverb that describes how an action is performed, for example, "She talked noisily."
"Original" is an adjective, not an adverb. The comparative form is "more original". The adverb is "originally" and the comparative of that would be "more originally".
The adverb form is "easily" and the comparative is "more easily."
The comparative form of the adverb "often" is "more often."
The adjective stranger is the comparative form of the adjective strange. The adverb "more strangely" is the comparative form of the adverb, strangely.
Adverb of
No...it is a noun. I think you mean NOISILY, as in "The car drove noisily past."....which IS an adverb.
The adverb is noisily.
The comparative form of the adverb soon is SOONER: She arrived SOONER than the other guests.