Depends on the friend
You would willingly schedule time with a good friend. You would willingly cancel time with a good friend if your best friend was in need. You would loan a good friend a small sum of money. You would loan money to your best friend and not care whether you get repaid. You give of yourself to a best friend in the same way you would do for yourself - no reservation.
It would be an adverb. If you said "I willingly gave up my last cookie," the word "willingly" would be an adverb because it describes a verb. Adverbs typically modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs.
A person who willingly works for no salary is known as a volunteer.Many charities and societies would not be able to exist without the dedication of volunteers.
The comparative form of "willingly" is "more willingly." In English, adverbs that are not one-syllable words typically use "more" to form the comparative. Therefore, when comparing the degree to which someone is willing, you would say "more willingly."
to have the person to help you when you need it
AnswerThat person is not your friend.
The superlative for willing would be "most willing." There is no one-word superlative.
If that person is your friend then tell them that you love the person they love. If they are your real friend they would understand.
Yes, any person, place, thing, or idea is a noun. A friend is a person the word friend would be a noun.
By finding the monetary value of something the person would willingly trade in exchange for the good or service <---Apex (:
if he/she is a real friend you would just be able to tell them
No they can't but if they've removed you as a friend, they would no longer be on your friend list.