Yes because it is a describing word.
Steadily is an adverb.
The word steadily is the adverb, as it describes the manner in which the lighthouse performed its action, which was to beam the light.
Intermittently
There are three syllables. Stead-i-ly.
It means full of steadfast (fixed in direction; steadily directed).
Yes. It is the adverb form of the adjective "steady." Example: His interest in stamps declined steadily as he grew up.
An adverb is a word that modifies or qualifies an adjective, verb, or other adverb or a word group. The only word in the sample sentence that performs this function is "steadily".
Judaism is the religion and philosophy of many Jewish people ("Jewish" is the adjective). Its details are found in an enormous and steadily growing body of Judaic sacred and secular writings and commentaries.
The word "rusty" is an adjective. It is used to describe the condition of something that has rust on it.
more steadily
more steadily, most steadily
Steadily is an adverb.
She ran slowly, but steadily, and soon finished the race. He wrote steadily for hours.
They always steadily walk.
Steadily is an adverb.
While his injuries were serious, he's steadily improving. It has been snowing steadily for several hours.
the word many is not an adverb since an adverb is and adjective describing a verb and "Mary ran many" isn't correct. words like quickly and steadily are adverbs.