No, it is an adjective. The adverb form is beneficially.
Yes, it is an adverb. It is the adverb form of "ready" and means quickly and easily.
Yes, you can change patience into an adverb. The adverb is "patiently."
No, it is not an adverb. Became is the past tense of the verb become.
Yes, begrudgingly is an adverb.
The adverb of hurry is hurriedly.An example sentence is: "she hurriedly rushed out the door to catch the bus".
The adverb could be hurriedly (hastily).
It is hurriedly.
Yes. Hurriedly is an adverb. It means done in a hurry, with haste.
No, the term 'hurry up' is a verb, adverb combination. In this context, the word 'hurry' is a verb (hurry, hurries, hurrying, hurried). The word 'up' is an adverb that modifies the verb.The noun 'hurry' is an abstract noun, a word for a state of urgency or eagerness.
No. The word rush is a verb (to hurry) or noun (a hurried state).
No, it is not. It is the adverb form of the adjective hurried, which is the past participle of to hurry.
Hurriedly is the adverb of hurry.An example sentence is: "he hurriedly answered the last test question before the time ran out".
The adverb form of the adjective hurried is hurriedly.(Hurried is the past tense and past participle of to hurry, and can be used as an adjective.)
He was supposed to be there at seven, but he was running behind. In the hurry to evacuate, his laptop was left behind.
It means "fast". Or "be fast". "Bystro" would be the better transliteration. It's an adverb that means fast, quickly, rapidly
The future tense of "hurry" is "will hurry" or "going to hurry".