No. It is an adverb, and modifies verbs and adjectives.
differing can be used as an adjective, e.g. broadly differing circumstances.
a giraffe is broadly.
it means fast/lively, majestically and broadly
That is the correct spelling of the adverb "broadly" (widely, or in general terms).
The main job of an adverb is to modify a verb. An adverb can also modify and adjective, which is a word that 'tells more about a noun'. So, by modifying an adjective, an adverb is telling you more about the noun. Examples:a really hot dayfreshly laundered sheetsa broadly worded question
Broadly speaking, everyone should go to the ballots on election day.
science can be BROADLY classified into chemistry physics n Biology.
grins
LIGITIMACY
Yes. The dictionary says that it is an adverb.
There isn't such a thing as a "plural" or "singular" tense. The tenses are either Present, Past or Future (broadly speaking, there are several subcategories). Singular/plural refer to Number. "Hot" is an adjective, therefore is has neither tense, nor number, only degrees of comparison.
was broadly applied