Snowflakes twirled down like confetti from winter's parade.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective form is playful, from the noun play, and the verb to play.
The snowflakes is the correct one
Playfully is an adverb.
Yes!
cavort
The breeze whipped playfully through the grass and caused the leaves to dance merrily in the air
it playfully describes how an only child tends to be self-centered
Yes, the word 'players' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'player', a word for someone taking part in a sport or game; a word for someone who plays a musical instrument; a word for a device for playing recorded material; a word for a person or a thing.to play is the verb,play or a play is a noun,playful is the adjective form,playfully is the adverb form
No, players is a plural noun. An adverb form of the verb or noun play is playfully.
They ran playfully down to the store. She playfully teased him until he blushed.
The word play can be a noun or a verb. There is the related adjective "playful" which has the adverb form "playfully." The participles of the verb to play (playing and played) can also be used as adjectives, but do not form adverbs.
she jumped about playfully.
I playfully ran with my dog at the park.
Those letters spell the verb gambol (to run or skip playfully, to romp).
Gayfully rhymes with playfully. so dose beautyfuly
Playfully is the adverb.
The father playfully acted like a horse when his son was on his back.
playfully poke him back.. he is flirting with her
Playfully
it is a adj. it describes a noun like the noun is dog the adj. is playfulness While an adjective describes a noun (the DOG is PLAYFUL), an adverb describes a verb (the dog BARKED PLAYFULLY).