No, it is not. It descibes a noun, so it is an adjective. It can refer to having a light coating of fur, or it can refer to an idea that is not very understandable.
No. Enjoy is not an adverb, it's a verb. Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs. Verbs show an action or a state of being. Example: I thoroughly enjoyed that concert! (thoroughly is the adverb; enjoyed is the verb)
No it is not. Guest can be noun (visitor, client), an adjective, or more rarely a verb (to host, to treat as a guest).
Yes, the word upstairs is an adverb. It is also an adjective and a noun.
An example sentence is: "he is painting the hallway upstairs".
Click here to see upstairs in a dictionary..
It is neither. It is a personal pronoun, the second person pronoun in both the nominative and objective cases.
What is the adverb for intend?
There is an adverb that is based on the past participle intended, which is intendedly.
But the one much more commonly used is based on the nouns intent or intention: intentionally (done with a specific intent).
No, the word restless is an adjective. The adverb is restlessly.
Is justifiable a noun a verb or an adverb?
The word justifiable is an adjective, not a verb, noun, or adverb.
The adjective justifiable describes a noun as able to be shown to be right or reasonable; having sufficient grounds for justification; possible to justify. Example:
We can't penalize a student if they have a justifiable explanation.
Yes, it can be (e.g. charming rogues).
The word charming is the present participle of the verb (to charm) and can be used as an adjective (displaying charm) or a noun (gerund).
Slowly
The adjective greedy has the adverb form "greedily." It means done in a greedy or avaricious manner.
What is an adverb for hastily?
Hastily is already an adverb, the adverb form of the adjective hasty.
Synonyms are quickly or hurriedly.
Is being patient an adverb or an adjective?
The two words are a participial phrase (a noun). Being is a present participle used as a gerund (noun) and patient is an adjective.
What is the adverb form of agree?
One adverb (rarely used) is agreeingly.
An adverb more frequently used is agreeably, from the related adjective agreeable.
What is an adverb phrase modifier?
An adverb phrase is two or more words that act as an adverb. It would be modified by an adverb or another adverb phrase.
Can' call' be an adverb or adjective?
The word 'call' is not an adverb nor an adjective. The word 'call' is a verb. It signifies action or something that is being done. An adverb describes how the action is being done while an adjective provides a description to the subject or the reference point.
Is how eager she was to do her best a noun clause?
Actually, 'How eager she was to do her best.' is a complete sentence, a complete thought.
The subject is 'she', the verb is 'was', the word 'how' is an adverb describing the intensity of the predicate adjective 'eager'. The subject and predicate is another way of saying, 'She was so eager to do her best.'
What suffix can you use for adverb ENTIRELY to make it an adverb?
As your question indicates, "entirely" is an adverb; it doesn't need an additional suffix.
No, it is not an adverb. It is a negative verb form written as a conditional contraction. It means "could not" where not by itself would be an adverb.