The Latin equivalent of the English phrase 'aging comfortably' is the following: commode senescens. The word 'commode' is an adverb that means 'appropriately, fitly, properly, or rightly'. But it also can mean 'comfortably, pleasantly' and even 'kindly'. The word 'senescens' means 'growing old'.
Vac is Latin
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
solus is the latin word for alone ( it is a latin root and can have endings added to it )
Yes in latin is Ita vero! No in latin is Minime!
from the latin word for circle
Comfortably is the adverb of comfortable.An example sentence is: "he sat comfortably on the sofa".Another example is: "the cat slept comfortably on the bed".
The adjective is "comfortable"; "comfortably" is an adverb.
The adverb modifier is "quite," which describes the degree to which she lived comfortably. It modifies the adjective "comfortably."
aging
"Aging" can either be an adjective (as in, "an aging person") or a gerund (as in, "The person was aging rapidly").
No villeins couldn't live very comfortably.
Comfortably Numb was created on 2007-02-12.
Comfortably Uncomfortable was created on 2005-08-22.
The book "Aging Identity: A Dialogue with Postmodernism" examines aging from a point of view that aging is not a decline, but a dynamic change. It looks at aging and the attitude towards the elderly in different cultures and the diversity of aging peoples. The book also looks at the challenges and opportunities that come with aging.
British English typically spells "aging" as "ageing."
Comfortably It describes the manner in which an action is done with comfort or ease.
Comfortably isn't any type of verb. It's an adverb.