The word viciously is an adverb, yes.
An example sentence using the word is: "the lion viciously killed the hunter in order to protect the cubs".
The virtual-never-seen adverb form is growlingly (from the present participle growling).Adverbs used with the verb "growled" can include ferociously, menacingly, or viciously.
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.
The virtual-never-seen adverb form is growlingly (from the present participle growling).Adverbs used with the verb "growled" can include ferociously, menacingly, or viciously.
The correct spelling of the adverb is viciously(violently, cruelly).The word that has a S is viscous, meaning thick.
An adjective describes a noun and should not be confused with an adverb, which describes a verb. For example, in the sentence, "The angry husband viciously yelled at his wife," "angry" is an adjective and "viciously" is an adverb.
The prowling lion pounced on the grazing zebra and viciously sank its teeth into the zebra's flesh.The pit bull barks loudly and viciously at anyone who passes that house.The poor girl watched as the man viciously attacked her mother.She will serve only a few weeks in jail for viciously abusing three innocent puppies.
viciously.
Yes, very viciously.
The monster vicously tore him apart.
Teasing someone viciously.
he interacted with their ships by shooting viciously at them.
ferociously, savagely, passionately, furiously, viciously, tigerishly
abolitionists i believe
Raccoons will bite and claw viciously when in a fight or to themselves from potential predators.