No, the word "animal" is not an adverb.
The word "animal" is a noun.
No, it is not. The word elephant is a noun meaning the large mammalian animal.
There is no adverb form of the adjective elephantine.
There is no adverb form of the word puppies.This is because the word puppies is a noun.
The adverb of disgust is disgustingly.An example sentence is: "he disgustingly ate the rotten frog".
No, it is not an adverb. The word wagged is a past tense verb.
No, it is an adjective (a noun, person or animal, can be disobedient). The adverb form is disobediently (done in a disobedient manner).
No. Berries is a plural noun, more than one berry. There is no formal adverb for berry.
"Names" is a noun. It refers to words by which a person, animal, place, or thing is known. An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb, indicating how, when, where, or to what extent something is done.
No, it is not. The word elephant is a noun meaning the large mammalian animal.
"Dweller" is a noun. It refers to a person or an animal who lives in a particular place. It is not an adjective or an adverb.
No, it is not. The word horse is a noun (an animal) and more rarely a verb.
No, "body" is not an adverb. It is a noun that refers to the physical structure of a person or an animal. An adverb is a word that typically modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb to provide more information about manner, place, time, degree, or frequency of an action.
if you are reffering to the body part, yes it could also be an adverb
No, it is a noun, as an adverb describes an adverb, eg. 'I ran quickly', quickly being the adverb. Needle is a noun, as nouns are a person, animal, place, thing or an object. An adjective descibes the noun, eg, 'the pin was silver and shiny'or ' I picked up the silver and shiny pin' Silver and shiny being the adjective, pin being the noun.
It can be: To tortoise is to roll over a ship (Very not good), or to position the companies shields so they form a tortoise shell the company can advance under against enemy fire.
No, it is an adjective. It is formed from the present participle eating, indicating that an animal could potentially kill and eat humans.
If you are asking for an adverbial form of the word frantically, that word is already an adverb. If you are asking for another adverb which can be used to modify frantically, the best choice would be very. The trapped animal was trying very frantically to escape.