No. Plain is a noun, or an adjective. The adjective plain has the adverb form "plainly."
There is no such word in English, -it is gibberish.
Literal is word for word; verbatim
doubed
I didn't mean it!I mean, seriously what's your problem?You are being so mean.
plainly
two
Yes, plainly is an a adverb. It can mean clearly or obviously, or done in a plain or straightforward manner.
To be concise in your speaking, to say exactly what you mean, plainly.
A night where they could see the target plainly.
No. That would mean "excited like a cliff " which is nonsense. Use a word like "clearly" or "plainly" if you mean the excitement is evident; like "thoroughly" or "totally" if you mean it is all-encompassing.
A night where they could see the target plainly.
plainly, flatly, boring.
Plainly this means that he wants a break.
You do not need to be an attorney to file an appeal. Just word it as plainly, and briefly (and respectfully) as possible setting forth your reason(s) why your appeal should be granted. Judges know that not everyone is skilled in legal language (and sometimes the plainly worded ones are more understandable).
This is how you spell the number 12th in word form: twelfth. This word is used to denote a specific order, place, or date.
Because Word is built for practical terming (writing plainly) instead of changing the script into HTML. Use Notepad or another program