Verbs cannot end in -ly. Words ending with -ly are mostly Adverbs.
possibly an -ly at the end of the word.
An adverb. These often end in -ly, such as quicklyAn adverb. They normally end in -ly, like quickly.
The features of AN ADVERB ARE WHEN YOU ADD LY ON THE END AND DESCRIBE A VERB.
Ly is added at the end of a word so that makes it a suffix. Words that end in 'ly' are adverbs, or verb modifiers. Often, 'ly' can be added on to the adjective form of a word. For example, "quick" is an adjective, but add 'ly' and you get "quickly" which tells you how something was done. "I read the book quickly." How did you read the book? Quickly.
An adverb would be more likely to end in ly because it often tells us the manner in which the verb action was performed, such as slowly, angrily, carefully, etc. An adjective could also end in ly when it modified another adjective, but I think it would be rare.
possibly an -ly at the end of the word.
An adverb. These often end in -ly, such as quicklyAn adverb. They normally end in -ly, like quickly.
* When you say something you know is untrue or when people don't trust you anymore.
An adverb. Almost all adverb end in ly
The features of AN ADVERB ARE WHEN YOU ADD LY ON THE END AND DESCRIBE A VERB.
Adverbs typically end in -ly such as happily, abnormally, dauntingly, or brazenly. Adverbs modify a verb, adjective or another adverb.
No. An adverb is a verb that gains the legal (in grammar) ly at the end. The ly allows it to start describing other verbs or a noun or something.
No . . . adverbs almost universally end in 'ly'. 'Mingled' is a verb in the past tense.
"Obesity" is a noun. "Obese" is the adjective.Adverbs often end in -ly, but with or without the -ly ending, their purpose is to modify a verb. For example, in "She walked quickly through the corridor," walked is a verb. Quickly describes how she walked.Obese is never a verb, and it is not an adverb.
Ly is added at the end of a word so that makes it a suffix. Words that end in 'ly' are adverbs, or verb modifiers. Often, 'ly' can be added on to the adjective form of a word. For example, "quick" is an adjective, but add 'ly' and you get "quickly" which tells you how something was done. "I read the book quickly." How did you read the book? Quickly.
Yes. Any word that ends in 'ly' is an adverb. Though, there are a few exceptions such as bully, gully, sully, belly, etc. But any 'ly' prefix that is added to the end of a verb turns the verb into an adverb.
An adverb would be more likely to end in ly because it often tells us the manner in which the verb action was performed, such as slowly, angrily, carefully, etc. An adjective could also end in ly when it modified another adjective, but I think it would be rare.