the adverb of patient is patiently
for example : John waited patiently on the stairs.
The adverb form for the noun patience is the adverb form of the adjective patient: patiently.(or the negative adverb, impatiently)
Neither. Very is an adverb and patient an adjective.
The word patiently is an adverb. It means to do something in a patient manner.
Neither. Very is an adverb and patient an adjective.
Patiently is the adverb of patient.An example sentence is: "the cat waited patiently for her human to fill the bowl with tuna".Another example is: "the teacher patiently stared at the student, waiting for an answer".
No, it is not a proper noun. It is an adverb.
The two words are a participial phrase (a noun). Being is a present participle used as a gerund (noun) and patient is an adjective.
The word "no" can be an adjective or adverb. It is also rarely a noun. As an interjection, it might also be considered an adverb. Adjective: We had no food and no water. Adverb: We could go no farther. The patient has gotten no better.* Noun: His answer was a firm no. Interjection: No, I won't go. * The adverb form is "not." The use of "no" as an adverb often includes examples where "not" would be used in a different construction (e.g. We could go no farther/ We could not go farther)
Yes. patiently is an adverb because in this example sentce, Fran waited patiently at the door, the word patiently is describing how Fran waited.
patiently Adverb: a word or phrase that modifies or qualifies an adjective, verb, or other adverb or a word group, expressing a relation of place, time, circumstance, manner, cause, degree, etc. (e.g., patiently, patient, then, there ).
It tells none of those three. Patiently is an adverb of manner, in that it tells HOW an action is performed (in a patient or forbearing manner).
Like most words ending in ly, patiently is an adverb.Example: She waited patiently for her turn. (the adverb 'patiently modifies the verb 'waited')