friendly
The word 'loudly' is the adverb form for the adjective loud.
Loudly is an Adverb.
No, the word loud is an adjective (loud, louder, loudest), a word that describes a noun.Examples:They were playing loud music.He was a sight in that loud jacket.
A participial phrase is a group of words that begins with a participle (a verb form used as an adjective) and includes any modifiers or complements. It provides additional information about a noun in a sentence and often describes an action related to that noun. For example, in the sentence "Running down the street, the dog barked loudly," "Running down the street" is a participial phrase that describes the dog.
No.I thought it was. I know loudly is an adjective... but I don't think that has much to do with the question...
NO!!!! An adverb qualifies a verb. e.g. The dog barked loudly. Verb ; barked Adverb ; loudly.
An adverb describes(qualifies) an verb. e.g. The dog barked (No adverb; ) The dog barked loudly ( Adverb).
The dog barked loudly. The cat hissed at the dog. The dog barked loudly and the cat hissed at him.
The dog barked loudly when the mailman arrived. (when the mailman arrived is an adverb clause modifying the verb barked)
There is no adjective in the sentence "The lion growled loudly." Loudly is an adverb modifying the verb growled.
The word 'loudly' is the adverb form for the adjective loud.
Loudly is an Adverb.
Loudly is an Adverb.
The determiner in the sentence is "the." It specifies which dog is being referred to.
Some types of sentence patterns include: N + V Example: The dog barked. N + V + Adv. Example: The dog barked loudly. Adj. + N + V Example: The big dog barked.
"The dog barked loudly."
The vicious dog barked loudly, causing the mouse to scurry into a nearby drain pipe for protection.