Adverbs mostly, but don't always, have the suffix -ly on the end.
The adverb of ample is amply.
Ample is an adjective, not a verb. There is no related verb form. The adverb form is amply.Example: We have ample food to see us through the winter.(ample = sufficient, plentiful)A verb for is to amplify.
The adverb is amply.Adjectives that end in -LE (mostly -able, ible, and simple, single) form the adverb by replacing the E with Y.(One, whole, drops the E and adds LY to make the adverb wholly.)
neatly
There is no adverb for amazement. The closest adverb would be "amazingly".
An adverb phrase is two or more words that act as an adverb. It would be modified by an adverb or another adverb phrase.
Ample is an adjective, not a verb. There is no related verb form. The adverb form is amply.Example: We have ample food to see us through the winter.(ample = sufficient, plentiful)A verb for is to amplify.
The adverb is amply.Adjectives that end in -LE (mostly -able, ible, and simple, single) form the adverb by replacing the E with Y.(One, whole, drops the E and adds LY to make the adverb wholly.)
To write is a verb.
No, white is not an adverb, because white is an adjective.
No, because you would like to start the sentence right and if you start it with an adverb it would be a sentence fragment.
more proudly
neatly
it would be an adverb because it would not be describing a noun as what an adjective would do but insted it is describing a verb so i think it would be an adverb
An adverb phrase is two or more words that act as an adverb. It would be modified by an adverb or another adverb phrase.
Happily is an adverb.
An adjective would be beautiful, and an adverb would be beautifully
The adverb would be "inalienably." But it would have very limited use.