their are none
cycley
The root word is haste, and it is adverb that descrives doing something quickly, usually with little care.
The suffix is 'ly'. "brisk" is the root word (It's an adjective)
Centrifugal, centripetal, concentric, eccentric.
No.
The root word is duty. Fully is the suffix which makes the word an adverb.
The adverb of the word value is valuably. That is a related form of the root word.
Phil is not a root word. It is not a word at all unless you mean it as the name Phil, as in Dr. Phil. It is however a common prefix and it means love or liking for. Philadelphia literally means, "city of brotherly love." It is also used as a suffix (example: "pedophile").
Yes it is. If a root word, in this case, correct, is added with -ly, it is usually an adverb.
cycley
To find the comparative of an adverb, find its root word. Once you have the root word, conjugate it for more. For example, if you are trying to find the comparative for 'quickly,' first find the root, quick, then conjugate it for more quick: quicker.(If you are asking how to make a comparative adverb, it's just more adverb. For example, more quickly.)
To find the comparative of an adverb, find its root word. Once you have the root word, conjugate it for more. For example, if you are trying to find the comparative for 'quickly,' first find the root, quick, then conjugate it for more quick: quicker.(If you are asking how to make a comparative adverb, it's just more adverb. For example, more quickly.)
The noun benefit is the root word of the adverb beneficially. An example of this word used in a sentence might be, "The medication effected his headache beneficially."
The root word is haste, and it is adverb that descrives doing something quickly, usually with little care.
The root word is "percept", which means "to see". The "im-" at the beginning is a prefix meaning "not". The suffix is a compound suffix made of "-ible" and "-ly", which shifts the root word from a verb form to an adjective to an adverb.
The root word "male" relates to characteristics traditionally associated with men or the male sex, such as masculinity, strength, or maleness.
"Great", "greater", and "greatest" are all adjectives, more particularly the normal, comparative, and superlative degrees of the root adjective "great".