Not usually. It is an adjective, and only an adverb informally, when it takes the place of the adverb form neatly. Used with verbs such as serve or keep, it is technically still an adjective.
The adverb of neat is neatly.An example sentence is: "he folds his socks neatly".
No, it is an adverb. The form -LY almost always indicates an adverb form. The adjective form is "neat".
The adverb form of the adjective tidy is tidily. It means in a tidy or neat manner.
i do not think there is a past tense of "neat"...."your room is very neat" (present tense) and "her room was very neat" (past tense)...same word.
The word 'neat' is not a verb.The word 'neat' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'neat' is neatness.The verb form is to neaten.
The adverb of neat is neatly.An example sentence is: "he folds his socks neatly".
Neatly is ADVERB. It answers the question "HOW".
Yes, neatly is an adverb. It described something done in a neat or orderly fashion.
Neatly is an adverb. Neat is the adjective form.
No, it is not. Dapper is a somewhat archaic adjective for neat or well-dressed.
No, it is an adverb. The form -LY almost always indicates an adverb form. The adjective form is "neat".
The adverb form of the adjective tidy is tidily. It means in a tidy or neat manner.
In grammar, an adverb is a word that modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb, often indicating manner, place, time, frequency, or degree. A "clean" adverb does not exist as a specific category, but many adverbs can describe actions in a clean or neat manner, such as "neatly" or "tidily." Essentially, adverbs enhance the meaning of other words by providing additional context.
Neat Neat Neat was created on 1977-02-18.
i do not think there is a past tense of "neat"...."your room is very neat" (present tense) and "her room was very neat" (past tense)...same word.
Anagrams for neat are: Ante Etna Nate neat
they neat to live so they live to neat