To make this easier, let's put "swiftly into a sentence:The trees moved swiftly with the grace of the wind.First we need to know what verbs, nouns, adjectives, and adverbs are:A noun is a person, place, or thing. "Swiftly" is not any of these. The nouns in this sentence are "trees", "grace", and "wind."A verb is the action of the noun/pronoun, or what the noun/pronoun is doing. "Moved" is the verb in this sentence, because the trees are completing the action of moving. So "swiftly" is not a verb.An adjective is something that describes the noun. There are no adjectives in this sentence because the "trees", "grace", and "wind" are not being described.An adverb is a word that describes the verb, usually ending in -ly. Aha! The -ly rule should automatically give you your answer. "Swiftly" is an adverb. Also, the word "swiftly" describes how the trees are moving, and it even comes right after the verb. Therefore, "swiftly" is an adverb.
Adjectives: fierce (describing hawk), blue and cloudless (describing sky) Adverb: swiftly (modifying swooped)
quicklyrapidlyspeedilyfastThese are all synonyms of swiftly.
i am the most quietly girl in school
out of all the girls I have met, she was the most alluring
I swiftly ran away.
For example: He swiftly kicked the ball scoring a goal for his team.
most of my weird answers that dont help people on wiki answers come to me swiftly
The river current moves more swiftly in the narrow channel. The army moved swiftly to prevent looting after the earthquake.
ali runs swiftly
We may use Furiously as swiftly or intensively e.g. You dont should be peevish do everything furiously!
more swiftly, most swiftly
I would recommend that you use "most swiftly" since swiftliest could sound a bit awkward.
more swiftly, most swiftly
verb = sees adverb = swiftly
Large is an adjective. In this sentence it is describing the noun fish and is part of the subject (large fish) of the sentence.
There are: Comparative-more swiftly and superlative-most swiftly. Hope it helps you!