No, a doctor cannot modify another doctor's prescription without consulting the original prescribing doctor.
Adverbs modify a verb, another adverb, or an adjective.
Modify
noun, verb, or another adverb
Amend is another word meaning change is Coins/ Apexs
An adverb cannot modify nouns or pronouns, as adjectives do. It may modify a verb, adjective, or another adverb. Other parts of speech (conjunctions, prepositions) are never modified.
No, it cannot. But an adverb can modify an adjective (e.g. almost bald) or another adverb (e.g. almost completely).
Another word for customization is "Modify".
First is commonly used and firstly is used when you want be more formal. Both are used to show order. Examples: First, she has to go to the doctor. Firstly, you must go to the doctor. Her first name is Shelly.
No, an adverb can modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb only. Adjectives are the words that are used to describe pronouns.
The Eighth Doctor regenerates in the 2013 short 'Night of the Doctor' special, between episode 13 of season 7, 'The Name of the Doctor', and the 50th anniversairy episode, 'Day of the Doctor'. He is killed in a spacecraft crash, but the Sisters of Karn briefly revive him and persuade him to modify his regeneration. So instead of directly becoming the 9th, he adopts a new persona, in between the two. The Seventh Doctors Regeneration WAS SEEN on screen, in the 1996 TV Movie (He clearly regenerates into the Eighth Doctor, played by Paul McGann). The Eighth Doctors Regeneration was NOT seen, and like the the original answer here says, it's widely believed that this transformation towards the end of The Time War. The Ninth Doctor (Christopher Eccleston) is surprised and amused by his apparant-new face during the first New-Series episode 'Rose' from 2005.
adverb
alter