No, the word hurriedly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb. Example:
We hurriedly dressed so we wouldn't miss the bus.
Mom hid the gifts hurriedly when she heard the kids stirring.
"Would" is an auxiliary verb that is used to express a future action or a conditional statement. It is not a main verb by itself but helps to convey different meanings in a sentence.
Yes, the word 'define' is a verb. The noun form would be 'definition'.
The correct sentence construction is "Is he absconding?" Absconding is a verb used to describe the act of leaving secretly or hurriedly to avoid detection or arrest. "Is he an abscond" would not be a grammatically correct construction in this context.
It's difficult to say, because large is an adjective and adjectives don't necessarily have a verb form. To be a verb it would have to be an action word. The best I can give you is "enlarge"
A verb is an action or the word before the action. Both would be the verb.
it is an adverb because it describes HOW you did something. Bob ran hurriedyly. Bob is the subject. Ran is the verb. HOW did Bob run? Hurriedly.
No. It's a noun or a verb (to rush). One adverb form is "hurriedly ."
My apologies for having hurriedly written this answer.
they describe a verb like an example would be hurriedly and ends i (l y)
Perhaps I've answered too hurriedly.
This sentence is a common subject verb object sentence, where the adjective describes the object. In this sentence, the adjective spare describes the desk, telling the reader what kind of desk it is.
Scribble is a verb that refers to writing carelessly or hurriedly. It is not a Vaclav word, and is mostly used colloquially rather than formally in different forms of literature.
Yes. Hurriedly is an adverb. It means done in a hurry, with haste.
Yes, it is. It means in a quick, hurried or hasty manner.
No, the word 'tried' is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to try'; for example, "We tried to contact you."The past tense of the verb is also an adjective, for example, a tried and true method.An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, for example, "He hurriedly tried to hide the mess.", or "She recentlytried her hand at painting."
The comparative form of the word "hurriedly" is "more hurriedly." In English grammar, adverbs that end in -ly form their comparative by adding "more" before the adverb. This is different from adjectives, which typically add "-er" to form the comparative (e.g., "faster" for the adjective "fast").
The likely word is "furiously" (angrily, or hurriedly).