riot
Yes. It means in a wild manner, or colloquially "extremely" (e.g. wildly popular).
loudly talk about wild things and different tones of your voice
Translation: salvajemente (if it means "in an uncontrollable way", i.e. He is running around wildly.) // extremadamente (if it means "extremely", i.e. Your information is wildly innacurate.)
The tiger ran wildly through the village, but did not hurt anyone.
"Wildly" is an adverb . . . it modifies a verb (action word). "He was running around the yard wildly". 'Wildy' modifies the verb, 'running'.
Rampage
The word is flail.
The children ran wildly through the park, laughing and playing games. The wind whipped wildly through the trees, sending leaves scattering in all directions. The party was a success, with the guests dancing wildly to the music.
The word 'protest' is both a noun (protest, protests) and a verb (protest, protests, protesting, protested).The noun 'protest' is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a statement or action expressing disapproval of or objection; a word for a thing.The noun forms of the verb to protest are protester, protestation, Protestant, and the gerund, protesting.
Hectically, hurredly, excitedly, wildly are all antonyms for the word listlessly.
Ecstatic...Delirious....impassioned.....
ecstatic