No, beautifully is an adverb, it describes a verb.
The future tense of the sentence "Susan sings beautifully" is "Susan will sing beautifully."
Two adverbs for the verb sing are clearly and beautifully.
Yes, the word 'beautifully' is an adverb modifying the verb 'developing'; for example: Your garden is developing beautifully.
Yes, beautifully is an adverb, a word that tells about how a verb is done; for example:The choir sang beautifully at the memorial service.The shoes and coat match beautifully.The exhibit at the museum was beautifully displayedChinese jade.
horribly beautifully raucously moodily
It is an adverb - it doesn't have a past tense.
Two adverbs for the verb sing are clearly and beautifully.
verb-beatify noun-beauty adjective-beautiful adverb-beautifully
The sentence "She sings beautifully when she is happy" contains an adverb ("beautifully") that describes the verb "sings" in the noun clause "when she is happy."
No, beautiful is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example beautiful roses, a beautiful sunset, etc.The noun form for the adjective beautiful is beautifulness. Another noun form is beauty.
The verb 'sews' is the third person singular form; your sentence requires a plural form verb for the plural subject 'Indians':The Seminole Indians of Florida sew beautifully designed quilts.
The verb for song is sing.Other verbs are sings, singing and sung.Some example sentences are:"I will sing for you on your birthday"."She sings beautifully"."He is singing in the band later"."I sung my heart out".