Slowly is the adverb form. The word slow can be either an adjective or adverb.
The adjective of strength is strong.The adverb of strength is strongly.
The adverb for slowly is "slowly." It describes the action of an activity done at a slow pace.
it is obviously an adjective because an adjective describes something and an adverb is an action
It can be either, because there is no adverb form (fastly) for speed.A fast car (adjective)He drove fast (adverb)
No, "wrinkly" is an adjective used to describe something that has wrinkles. An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or other adverb, but "wrinkly" does not serve this purpose.
It can be, to mean slowly. "Go slow around the curves."
An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb. With verbs, an adverb indicates how, when, or why an action is done. For adjective or adverbs, an adverb specifies the extent or manner of the modifier. Examples: He walked slowly to the car. - slowly modifies the verb walked He walked very slowly to the car. - very modifies the adverb slowly He was extremely tired. - extremely modifies the adjective tired
No, it's an adverb, the adjective is slow.
The word 'slowly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'slow'.The adverb 'slowly' is used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as not quickly.Examples:We walked slowly along the sidewalk enjoying the nice weather. (modifies the verb 'walked')The smell of slowly roasted coffee beans filled the air. (modifies the adjective 'roasted')He slowly deliberately inched along the ledge. (modifies the adverb 'deliberately')
An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb. With verbs, an adverb indicates how, when, or why an action is done. For adjective or adverbs, an adverb specifies the extent or manner of the modifier. Examples: He walked slowly to the car. - slowly modifies the verb walked He walked very slowly to the car. - very modifies the adverb slowly He was extremely tired. - extremely modifies the adjective tired
It can be, because slow is both an adjective and adverb. But the comparative form of the adverb could also be "more slowly."
Undulating is a verb and requires an an adverb, not an adjective, which describes a noun: Slowly undulating, sensuously undulating.
The word 'slow' is an adjective (slow, slower, slowest) and a verb (slow, slows, slowing, slowed).The word 'slowly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'slow', used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The word 'so' is an adverb and a conjunction. In the terms, 'so slow' or 'so slowly', the word 'so' is functioning as an adverb.Which is correct ('so slow' or 'so slowly') depends on what the term is modifying; for example:The mail delivery here is so slow. (the adjective 'slow' is the predicate nominative, describing the subject noun 'delivery'; the adverb 'so' is modifying the adjective)The cat crept so slowly that the bug never saw him. (the adverb 'so' is modifying the adverb 'slowly', which in turn is modifying the verb 'crept')
A comparative adverb is used to compare how something is done. Adverbs are derived from adjectives. Eg. Adjective -"slow". A regular adverb would be "slowly" - John drives slowly. A comparative adverb compares the "driving" -"more slowly". John drives more slowly than Dave.
No. Bring is a verb. There is an archaic adjective use for "brought" but no adverb form.Verb. Adverbs modify verbs- quickly, slowly, carefully.
The (article) snake (noun) moved (verb) slowly (adverb) through the grass (prepositional phrase).This sentence doesn't have an adjective, because an adjective describes a noun, pronoun, or other adjective.If you said "The snake moved slowly through the green grass," green would be the adjective because it is describing the word, "grass", which is a noun.
Dark can be an adjective or a noun. Darkly is an adverb.