Suspiciously is an adverb. John viewed the picture suspiciously for signs of tampering.
The loiter is spoiled
probably to race (to loiter along the way) ...
Suspiciously is an adverb, yes.Some example sentences are:He suspiciously stuffed the bags into a nearby hedge.The man was taken aside by police for behaving suspiciously.
suspiciously
Some words that rhyme with "loiter" include "destroyer," "deployer," and "employer."
Loiter is a verb.
The duration of Loiter Squad is 900.0 seconds.
The word 'suspiciously' is not a noun. The word 'suspiciously' is the adverb for of the adjective 'suspicious'. The noun forms are suspiciousness and suspicion.
Loiter Squad was created on 2012-03-25.
No. To loiter is a verb. The noun form is the gerund loitering.
The man did nothing but loiter the restaurant for money and free food. Loiter means to stand around or wait with no purpose.