No. It is an adverb. The noun form is "anger" (which also can be a verb).
Angrily is an adverb. The easy way to tell is to ask if angrily describes a verb or a noun. For example, in "Angrily Joseph juggled for the disrespectful audience." 'angrily' describes Joseph's juggling, not Joseph. You can angrily stomp, angrily swear, angrily knock, angrily tell, and angrily defenestrate, but you cannot angrily Joseph, angrily beaver, or angrily window.
Yes, because it describes a verb. You can look angrily at someone. You can angrily hit something. But you can't be 'angrily'.
anger is a chicken and angry is a chicken leg
"Angry" is not an adverb; it is an adjective that describes a noun by expressing a state of emotion. Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs, often indicating manner, degree, frequency, or time. For example, in the sentence "She spoke angrily," "angrily" is the adverb modifying the verb "spoke."
No, "angerily" is not a word. But "angrily" is. Example: He angrily yelled at his sister.
Anger.
Angrily is an adverb. The easy way to tell is to ask if angrily describes a verb or a noun. For example, in "Angrily Joseph juggled for the disrespectful audience." 'angrily' describes Joseph's juggling, not Joseph. You can angrily stomp, angrily swear, angrily knock, angrily tell, and angrily defenestrate, but you cannot angrily Joseph, angrily beaver, or angrily window.
"Angrily" is an adverb. Adverbs are derived from adjectives. The adjective is "angry".The noun is "anger".
Mr. (noun) Hernandez (noun) angrily (adverb) broke (verb) his (adjective) new (adjective) pencil (noun)
No, the word 'angrily' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb: She spoke angrily. He angrily slammed the door.An adverb can modify a verb, an adjective, and another adverb.The verb is to anger (angers, angering, angered). The word anger is also a noun.
In the sentence "Mr. Hernandez angrily broke his new pencil," "Mr." is a noun (title), "Hernandez" is a proper noun, "angrily" is an adverb, "broke" is a verb, "his" is a possessive pronoun, "new" is an adjective, and "pencil" is a common noun. Each word serves to provide specific information about the action and the subject.
angrily
Yes, because it describes a verb. You can look angrily at someone. You can angrily hit something. But you can't be 'angrily'.
most angrily
He angrily tore his paper in half.
No, it is not a verb. The word angrily is an adverb.
He angrily said he did not want to see her again.She angrily shouted her brother's name.