Left as the direction has the adverb forms "leftwardly" or "leftward" (which is also an adjective). Left as the past tense of the verb 'to leave' does not have an adverb form.
Any number of adverbs can be used with the verb left: quickly, slowly, suddenly, early, late, happily, angrily, frequently, occasionally.
Early
Early. --> It describes how they left.
The word "exited" means "departed" or "left" -- there is no adverb form. The similar word "excited" has the adverb form "excitedly" -- in an excited or enthusiastic manner.
Yes, depending on the sentence. If it is followed by a noun, it is a preposition. He had gone there before. (adverb) We left before the storm. (preposition)
The adverb in the sentence above "There was scarcely any candy left for Malcolm." is scarcely because it is describing the verb any... I believe that is what the answer is :)
Early
There is no adverb in this sentence. "Muddy" is an adjective, which modifies a noun. The only verb, "left" is unmodified. If you said, "We quietly left our muddy shows outside," then "quietly" would be an adverb, modifying the verb "left."
Early. --> It describes how they left.
Yes, when it indicates direction, e.g. the man turned left at the corner.
It can be either depending on the meaning.adjective - left hand, left turn, the food was leftadverb - face left, turn leftIt can also be a proper noun (liberal group) or the past tense of the verb to leave.
Almost may be either an adjective or an adverb - it depends on use. "Almost everyone left early." - Adjective, modifies pronoun 'everyone.' "We were almost there." = Adverb, modifies adverb 'there.'
The word "exited" means "departed" or "left" -- there is no adverb form. The similar word "excited" has the adverb form "excitedly" -- in an excited or enthusiastic manner.
Well, darling, the adverb in that sentence is "promptly." It's describing how the train left, which was right on the dot at 6:42 p.m. So, next time you want to sound fancy, throw in an adverb like "promptly" and watch the admiration roll in.
Yes, depending on the sentence. If it is followed by a noun, it is a preposition. He had gone there before. (adverb) We left before the storm. (preposition)
The adverb form of moody is moodily. An example would be "When the boy was kicked out of the mall he moodily left."
The adverb in the sentence above "There was scarcely any candy left for Malcolm." is scarcely because it is describing the verb any... I believe that is what the answer is :)
It can be either, depending on what it modifies. If it follows a noun, it can be an adjective phrase, but it is more often an adverb phrase answering "where." Example: The footprints in the wet sand had already disappeared - adjective, tells which footprints He left footprints in the wet sand - adverb, tells where they were left