Extremely is an adverb
extremeness
No, the word 'extreme' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.The abstract noun form of the adjective 'extreme' is extremeness.The concrete noun form of the adjective 'extreme' is extremity.
The possessive form is: The colonists were not prepared for the winter's extreme cold.
The noun form of agony using a prefix would be "unagony."
No, the word 'furious' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'furious' is furiousness.The word 'furious' is the adjective form of the noun fury.
Extremely is an adverb. Adjectives can only describe nouns, and no noun is described as being extremely.
The word delight is both a verb and an abstract noun.The noun delight is a singular, common, abstract noun, a word for a feeling of extreme pleasure or satisfaction; a word for an emotion.The abstract noun form of the verb to delight is the gerund, delighting.
The extreme cold of winter = the winter's extreme cold.
holding your breath is an extreme form of rebreathing
most extreme form of authoritarianism called
extreme is already an adjective: e.g. extreme sports ("extreme" describes the noun "sports") extreme hobby the "adverb" form of extreme is EXTREMELY e.g. That girl is extremely beautiful. ("extremely" describes the adjective "beautiful")
No. Horror is a noun. The related adjective is "horrible" and the adverb is "horribly."There is also a related adjective "horrendous" with the adverb form "horrendously."It is a noun.
The noun form for the adjective horrible is horribleness.