The part of speech that most often ends in -ly is an adverb. However, this does not mean either that (1) every word that ends in -ly is an adverb or (2) all adverbs end in -ly.
An ADVERB. Reason, it ends in '---ly'. and most adverbs in the English language end in '---ly'.
The features of AN ADVERB ARE WHEN YOU ADD LY ON THE END AND DESCRIBE A VERB.
An adverb. These often end in -ly, such as quicklyAn adverb. They normally end in -ly, like quickly.
possibly an -ly at the end of the word.
One example of an adverb suffix is "-ly".
Yes, anything that ends in "ly" is an adverb
The part of speech that most often ends in -ly is an adverb. However, this does not mean either that (1) every word that ends in -ly is an adverb or (2) all adverbs end in -ly.
Yes it is.
yes....if it ends in ly it is most likely to be an adverb
No. It is an adverb (because it ends in "ly").
An ADVERB. Reason, it ends in '---ly'. and most adverbs in the English language end in '---ly'.
No. 'Is' is an conjunction. An adverb usually ends in 'ly'. (Loudly, proudly, ect. )
No, there is no modern adverb with the ending LEY
No. It ends in "ly" so it is an adverb.
Any word that ends in "ly" is an adverb.
yes. if it ends in -ly it usually is but there are exceptions