With laughter or merriment.
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No. It is not an adverb. Laughter is a noun. The related adverbs would be laughingly or laughably.
The adverb form of "laugh" is "laughingly." It describes the manner in which someone laughs, indicating that the action is done in a joyful or amused way. For example, one might say, "She laughed laughingly at the joke." Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs, providing more detail about how an action is performed.
The only common adverb for the verb laugh is "laughingly." There is a related adjective, laughable, which has the adverb form laughably.
The only common adverb for the verb laugh is "laughingly." There is a related adjective, laughable, which has the adverb form laughably.
The only common adverb for the verb laugh is "laughingly." There is a related adjective, laughable, which has the adverb form laughably.
space is not a place like earth. He said laughingly, spatial rules are very different.
The noun or verb laugh has no direct adverb, but the present participle (laughing) has an adverb form laughingly.
It seems that Annie's heritage that she laughingly referred to could be a mix of traits or characteristics that are believed to contribute to her luck and stubbornness. This heritage could be a specific cultural background, family history, or a combination of both that she finds amusingly influential in shaping her personality.
Yes-- most verbs with the suffix -ly added to the end are known as adverbs. The reason why it is an adverb is because it modifies an adjective or verb.
No, it is not. The word laugh can be a noun or a verb. It can be used as a noun adjunct (attributive noun) with other nouns, in compound terms such as laugh track or laugh lines. Adverb forms of laugh include laughingly and laughably.
The adjective merrily means laughingly happy; mirthful; festively joyous; hilarious: having a merry time at the party. An archaic meaning is: causing happiness; pleasant; delightful.