It can be, to mean slowly.
"Go slow around the curves."
Yes, "slow" can function as an adverb when describing how an action is performed, as in "He drove slow." In this case, "slow" modifies the verb "drove" by describing the manner in which the action is carried out.
Add -ly onto the end to form the adverb "slowly."Or you could leave it alone. Slow can be used as an adverb in some cases, to mean slowly.(Walk slow around the elephants, as opposed to walk slowly, which could mean something else.)
The word 'slow' is an adjective (slow, slower, slowest) and a verb (slow, slows, slowing, slowed).The word 'slowly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'slow', used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The word 'so' is an adverb and a conjunction. In the terms, 'so slow' or 'so slowly', the word 'so' is functioning as an adverb.Which is correct ('so slow' or 'so slowly') depends on what the term is modifying; for example:The mail delivery here is so slow. (the adjective 'slow' is the predicate nominative, describing the subject noun 'delivery'; the adverb 'so' is modifying the adjective)The cat crept so slowly that the bug never saw him. (the adverb 'so' is modifying the adverb 'slowly', which in turn is modifying the verb 'crept')
No. Slow is an adjective, adverb, or verb (to slow down). It cannot be a preposition.
Slow and slowly is an adverb. I was slow. I walked slowly.
Yes, "slow" can function as an adverb when describing how an action is performed, as in "He drove slow." In this case, "slow" modifies the verb "drove" by describing the manner in which the action is carried out.
well, slow can be an adverb, verb, or adjective. verb: His broken leg slowed him down. adjective: I dislike slow people. adverb: Drive slow.
An adverb tells how much. The adverb tells how fast or how slow you ran.
Yes it is an adverb. It means in a tentative (slow and careful) way.
No. Unlike fast and slow, speedy is always an adjective. The adverb is speedily.
Add -ly onto the end to form the adverb "slowly."Or you could leave it alone. Slow can be used as an adverb in some cases, to mean slowly.(Walk slow around the elephants, as opposed to walk slowly, which could mean something else.)
It can be, because slow is both an adjective and adverb. But the comparative form of the adverb could also be "more slowly."
The word lazily is an adverb, the adverb form of the adjective lazy. It means done in a slow, unhurried, or lazy manner.
The word slowly is an adverb, and so is "slow" when used to mean done in a slow fashion. As an adjective, slow applies to something slow-moving; so modifying an action verb uses slow with an -LY sufffix. Examples: Go slow = Go slowly (proceed in a slow manner) A slow turtle = it moves slowly
The word 'slow' is an adjective (slow, slower, slowest) and a verb (slow, slows, slowing, slowed).The word 'slowly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'slow', used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The word 'so' is an adverb and a conjunction. In the terms, 'so slow' or 'so slowly', the word 'so' is functioning as an adverb.Which is correct ('so slow' or 'so slowly') depends on what the term is modifying; for example:The mail delivery here is so slow. (the adjective 'slow' is the predicate nominative, describing the subject noun 'delivery'; the adverb 'so' is modifying the adjective)The cat crept so slowly that the bug never saw him. (the adverb 'so' is modifying the adverb 'slowly', which in turn is modifying the verb 'crept')
Yes, in some cases, although often colloquially. "My clock runs slow." The adverb slowly usually means the same thing, but here it would be different.
No. Slow is an adjective, adverb, or verb (to slow down). It cannot be a preposition.