It can be. Less can be a noun (a lesser amount), an adjective, a preposition (without), or an adverb (the comparative form of little).
Examples:
"We know less about the new species than the others."
"I work less during winter."
No, excellent is an adjective. The adverb form is excellently.
How can you derive an adverb from security?
The best way to derive an adverb from a noun is to first change the noun to an adjective, and then convert that adjective to an adverb, usually by adding "ly" at the end. For example, in this case, we can derive the adjective "secure" from the noun "security," and then add "ly" at the end of this adjective to make it an adverb. So, you end up with the word "securely."
What is the adverb for better?
The word better can be an adverb as well as an adjective. It is the comparative form of the adjective good and the adverb well.
No, the word cook is not an adverb.
The word cook is a verb ("I will cook a meal") and a noun ("the cook was grumpy").
No, healthy is an adjective. However, you can make healthy into an adverb by adding -ily. So the adverb would be "healthily."
Yeah cause it has an "ly" but it depends if theres a verb in the sentence you're reading.
I presume by Advarb you mean adverb, because Advarb isn't a word and adverb is the closest word to it. So, the meaning of 'adverb' is a part of speech and modifies a verb. It can also modify any other part of the language for example:
verbs, adjectives (including numbers), clauses, sentences .. ect.
According to wordsmyth.com, "treat" can be a transitive verb, an intransitive verb, or a noun, but it can't be an adverb.
The adverb of greed is greedily.
An example sentence might be "he greedily snatched the money".
Another might be "the dog greedily took the cake while Joan wasn't looking".
What is the adverb in the sentence A mother lion sometimes leaves her cubs?
A mother lion sometimes leaves her cubs.
A verb is a 'doing' word = and the doing word above is 'leave'.
What is an adverb of frequency?
Adverbs of frequency are adverbs of time that tell you when things normally happen. They are either definite (daily, weekly) or indefinite (e.g. seldom, sometimes, occasionally, never).
No it is not a adverb .i think it is a verb because if you accept somethinit is considered a verbg
No. It can only be a preposition. The idiomatic form "of course" is an adverb meaning certainly or surely.
No. Exemplary (from the noun exemplar) is an adjective meaning worthy of imitation, or inspirational. There is a rarely-used adverb form, which is exemplarily.