slowly-most adverbs end in ly an adverb is a word describing a verb
The young girl walked slowly into the eerily, dark and spooky forest.
Walked is the verb and slowly is the adverb
The -ly suffix is used on adjectives to turn them into adverbs The man is slow (slow is an adjective because it modifies the noun (the man)) He walks slowly (slowly is an adverb because it modifies the verb (walks)) What is the man? The man is slow How does he walk? He walks slowly
Sighing or breathing slowly and hard.
The word 'slowly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'slow'.The adverb 'slowly' is used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as not quickly.Examples:We walked slowly along the sidewalk enjoying the nice weather. (modifies the verb 'walked')The smell of slowly roasted coffee beans filled the air. (modifies the adjective 'roasted')He slowly deliberately inched along the ledge. (modifies the adverb 'deliberately')
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Slowly or cautiously.
The car moved slowly along the winding country road.
She walked slowly through the park, taking in the sights and sounds.
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slowly-most adverbs end in ly an adverb is a word describing a verb
Yes, "slowly" is an adverb as it describes the manner in which an action is done, such as "He walked slowly." It provides more information about the verb in a sentence.
Slowly is actually an adjective, it describes the verb. For example, "she walked slowly" walked is the verb and slowly describes how she walked.
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The young girl walked slowly into the eerily, dark and spooky forest.
Walked is the verb and slowly is the adverb