No, it is an adverb meaning very much, or principally. It generally relates to the adjective great.
The verb is Kindness
Yes, "glorify" is a verb. It means to praise or honor something greatly.
No, greatly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb; for example: He has greatly improved his math grade. Words that end in "ly" are usually adverbs.
Abomination is a noun, meaning anything greatly disliked
Questions like this one demoralize me greatly.
the adverb is 'greatly' and it modifies 'affected' which is a verb, so no it does not modify an adjective.
No. It is grammatically correct to say, "I admire you, greatly."
"Astonish" is neither a noun nor a pronoun. It is a verb that means to surprise or impress someone greatly.
The word amaze is a verb (amaze, amazes, amazing, amazed), to surprise or astonish greatly; to fill with wonder. The noun form for the verb to amaze is amazement and the gerund, amazing.
"Editing" is the present participle of the verb "edit", called a gerund, a verb used as a noun, a common noun.e.g., "His editing of the reports greatly improved them".
No, the word 'appall' is a verb (appall, appalls, appalling, appalled): to greatly dismay or horrify.
Treasure is both a noun AND a verb. For example: I found some treasure in that cave, over there. For example: I fondly treasure my grandmother's antiques.