Yes. Any word that ends in 'ly' is an adverb. Though, there are a few exceptions such as bully, gully, sully, belly, etc. But any 'ly' prefix that is added to the end of a verb turns the verb into an adverb.
The bully will just have to bully
I think this answer can be a bully or an intimidator.
- a person who is getting into the bully's head - when a bully is into your head and passes it on - when you are becoming a bully - when you get bullied then you get angry with everyone else - when a bully gets into your head - when you catch a bully's meanness - when the bully gets into your head - when a bully bully's someone, they become a bully too - a bully's attitude turns you into a bully - a bully is being mean to you and then you become a bully - someone got into the bully's head and bullys other people - a bunch of bullies come and bully you - when you do something very bad and you don't mean it - bullies are bullying you and then you are sad - someone is being mean to you
Can't we all just get along? He might think twice the next time.
To Bully
2 bully and bully scholarship but bully scholarship isn't a sequel it just adds on to the original
A former bully may be referred to as a "reformed" bully.
bully
No all the people on WIkianswers bully you, only the mean people on Wikianswers bully you. People like the supervisors on bully you.
Anyone can be[come] a bully. Even if one doesn't bully throughout their entire life, they can bully someone in one conversation at which they are a bully, but it doesn't mean they will always be one.
Philip was given detention at school after three classmates complained that he was a bully.