Yes, it is an adverb. It is the adverb form of the adjective firm, and means in a firm way, or in a determined manner.
E.g.
The lines were firmly attached to the boat.
The governor firmly refused to compromise.
"Firmly" is an adverb. It is used to describe how an action is done, indicating the level of strength or intensity. Examples include "She firmly closed the door" or "He firmly believes in his principles."
No, "firmly" is an adverb, not a verb. It is used to describe how an action is performed, such as "he held the rope firmly."
The opposite of the adverb firmly (securely) is loosely.*When used to mean forcefully or determinedly (e.g. firmly stated), the opposite could be gently, weakly, or waveringly.
adverb for impact
The adverb form of "noise" is "noisily."
"Firmly" is an adverb. It is used to describe how an action is done, indicating the level of strength or intensity. Examples include "She firmly closed the door" or "He firmly believes in his principles."
No, "firmly" is an adverb, not a verb. It is used to describe how an action is performed, such as "he held the rope firmly."
The opposite of the adverb firmly (securely) is loosely.*When used to mean forcefully or determinedly (e.g. firmly stated), the opposite could be gently, weakly, or waveringly.
The word "firmly", meaning "in a firm manner", is an adverb.
firmly
It can be, where it means firmly, in a firm manner. e.g. He stood firm against his detractors. Firmly is ordinarily the adverb form.
"Alpha" is the adjective that describes the noun "female," and "firmly" is the adverb that describes the verb "leads."
Most Firmly is the answer. It''s not firmlier if that's what some of you are thinking Stay Smart!:) -DorkyGeek77
One possibility is "firmly".
firmly, weakly, strongly, boldly, barely.. etc.
An adjective modifies a noun. An adverb modifies a verb. "He gave his brother a firm push" (adjective) "He pushed his brother firmly" (adverb)
An adverb describes a verb.It can be placed at the beginning of a sentence, like:Gently, she patted her friend on the back.Or it could be right after the verb:She counted quickly, in a hurry to leave.Or right before the verb:She nervously looked down.Or at the end of the sentence:She shook my hand firmly.