yes
NO!!!! It is an adverb, because it ends in '---ly'.
No. It is an adverb.
'smooth;y' is and Adverb. In the English language words ending in '---ly' are adverbs.
The word 'smoothly' is the adverb form of the adjective smooth. The noun form for the adjective smooth is smoothness.
Oh, dude, the comparative form of "smoothly" is "more smoothly." It's like when you're trying to slide into a conversation smoothly, but someone else does it more smoothly than you. So yeah, "more smoothly" is the way to go if you want to compare smoothness levels.
NO!!!! It is an adverb, because it ends in '---ly'.
No. It is an adverb.
Roughly
"Smoothly" functions as an adverb. It is used to modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs, indicating how an action is performed.
'smooth;y' is and Adverb. In the English language words ending in '---ly' are adverbs.
Effortlessly or smoothly.
I hope that this program will be run smoothly.
The word 'smoothly' is the adverb form of the adjective smooth. The noun form for the adjective smooth is smoothness.
Your writing needs to be smoother, you need to learn how to write (more) smoothly. Smoother is an adjective. Smoothly is an adverb.
Yes, the adverb "high" tells to what height the eagle flies. It is, however, unspecific.
Fluently is already an adverb. The adjective form is fluent.
The word "swim" has no actual adverb form. The word "swimmingly" means smoothly or easily.