Adverbs that can be used for the verb landed include safely and gently.
It can be, because slow is both an adjective and adverb. But the comparative form of the adverb could also be "more slowly."
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)
No. The phrase "above the surface" is a prepositional phrase which could be used as an adverb. It has a preposition, an article, and a noun, but no adverb.
I cannot think of any way the word 'everywhere' could be used other than as an adverb.
No, the other way around. The adverb COMPLETELY could modify the adjective FEARLESS. e.g. The lion tamer was completely fearless.
An adverb is a word that describes or modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb. An adverb for "cackle" could be "maniacally," as it describes how the cackling is being done. Adverbs provide more information about the action or behavior being described in a sentence.
Well, everyone could die
Yes, an adverb can modify an adjective. For instance, you could say "I saw a very fast runner." Very, an adverb, modifies fast, an adjective. Another example is "The shelf is too high" where too (adverb) modifies high (adjective).
if i could separate whats real from what I've been dreamin, I could ...... another day
The adverb could be hurriedly (hastily).
The adverb for "energy" could be "energetically."
No. Bewilder is a verb. The adverb form could be "bewilderingly."
The word there could be an adverb applied to a street or intersection.
Our trip could turn out badly. Bad is not an adverb. Badly is an adverb.
The word 'rapidly' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Example:The boy rapidly ran to catch the ball before it could hit the ground.
The adverb profusely could describe sweating (action). The adjective sweating (e.g. sweating men) has no adverb form, but the adjective "sweaty" has the rarely-used adverb form "sweatily."
"To become famous" is an infinitive phrase. It could serve as a noun, adjective, or adverb, but there is no adverb in it.