The term "comfort" is primarily used as a noun or verb, not as an adverb. As a noun, it refers to a state of physical ease and well-being, while as a verb, it means to soothe or provide relief to someone in distress. If you meant an adverb related to "comfort," you might be thinking of "comfortably," which describes doing something in a relaxed and easy manner.
Yes, it is. It is the adverb form of the adjective grateful (displaying gratitude).
No. Stared is a verb. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb 'to stare."
What is the adverb for bubble?
The adverb form of the word bubble is bubbly.
An example sentence is: "She is a very bubbly girl".
What is the adverb for drizzle?
The adverb form of drizzle is drizzly.
An example sentence is: "the rain was a bit drizzly yesterday".
Yes. It can be, especially in the interrogative form (e.g. Why is he here?). But it can also be an interjectionwhere there is no actual question (Why!?), a conjunction (I know why you did it), and more rarely a noun (whys and wherefores).
What are the adjective and adverb in the sentence Many people often eat raw seeds?
adjective = raw
adverb = often
No, dauntless is not an adverb.
Dauntless is a noun and a verb.
The adverb form of the word is dauntlessly.
Click here for a dictionary entry on the word.
No, the word deeds is not an adverb.
The word deeds is a noun and sometimes a verb.
What is the adverb for scarce?
The adverb form of "scarce" is scarcely.
An example sentence is: "he apologised, scarcely above a whisper".
Yes, the word wonderfully is an adverb.
An example sentence using this word is: "the cake was wonderfully decorated".
No, the word wrote is not an adverb.
The word wrote is a verb, as it is an action (past tense of "write").
No, the word find is not an adverb.
The word find is a verb, adjective and a noun.
No, inquisitive is an adjective. The adverb would be inquisitively.
No, the word "grew" is not an adverb.
The word "grew" is a past-tense verb.
"Bigger" is not an adverb; it is a comparative adjective. It is used to compare the size of one noun to another, indicating that one is larger than the other. An example would be "The elephant is bigger than the lion." The adverb form of "big" would be "bigly," though it's rarely used.
No, "given" is not an adverb.
The word "given" is in fact a verb, adjective and sometimes a noun.
Click here for a dictionary entry on the word "given".
No, "squealed" is not an adverb.
Because it is an action, the word "squealed" is a verb.