Barely is an adverb of degree, moreso when it modifies an adjective (barely visible).
Yes, it is an adverb meaning barely or hardly.
It is neither. It is an adverb, and will modify a verb, adjective or adverb.
Cooliant
Barely is an adverb, and modifies verbs or adjectives. The adjective form is bare.
Barely is an adverb of degree, moreso when it modifies an adjective (barely visible).
Yes, it is an adverb meaning barely or hardly.
It is neither. It is an adverb, and will modify a verb, adjective or adverb.
Cooliant
Barely is an adverb, and modifies verbs or adjectives. The adjective form is bare.
Nearly (the converse of barely) is an adverb, as in nearly done or nearly fatal. It is the adverb form of the adjective near, not the adverb near.
The likely word is the adverb "barely" (hardly, scarcely).
No, "flamingly" is an adverb. It describes how something is done with fervor or intensity.
No, it is an adverb. Like scarcely, it implies a narrow sufficiency or opportunity.Examples:We could barely see the ship at that distance.We barely made it to the train on time.There was barely enough milk left for breakfast.
Yes it is.Practically any word ending in "-ly" is an adverb.I barely finished the racebarely= adverbfinished= verb
Adverbs that tell 'to what extent' are adverbs of intensity. Examples are: very extremely completely totally absolutely slightly fairly quite
"Strongly" is an adverb as it modifies verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs to indicate the degree or intensity of an action or quality.