The word 'briskly' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as in a quick and lively manner. The word briskly is the adverb for of the adjective brisk.
The word 'quick' is a noun when it refers to the bed of a fingernail, the outermost living layer under the nail.Otherwise, 'quick' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun. The word 'quick' sometimes used as an adverb instead of quickly.The colloquial use means "living" (e.g. the quick and the dead).
Adverbs are created from adjectives: quick > quickly, electrical > electrically . . miserable > miserably.
No. Quick can only be used as an adjective, a noun or an adverb.
In formal writing, never use 'real bad' or 'real quick.' 'Bad' and 'quick' are adjectives, which are modified by adverbs. The word 'real' is not an adverb.
The word 'briskly' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as in a quick and lively manner. The word briskly is the adverb for of the adjective brisk.
The adverb form is "quickly." *In some cases, as with "fast" the word quick may appear instead of quickly, e.g "Come quick" instead of "Come quickly."
There is no such word as "fastily." The adverb "fastly" means securely (made fast or attached). The word fast is the adverb used to mean speedy or quick.
The word becomes an adverb.
The word 'quick' is a noun when it refers to the bed of a fingernail, the outermost living layer under the nail.Otherwise, 'quick' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun. The word 'quick' sometimes used as an adverb instead of quickly.The colloquial use means "living" (e.g. the quick and the dead).
To find the comparative of an adverb, find its root word. Once you have the root word, conjugate it for more. For example, if you are trying to find the comparative for 'quickly,' first find the root, quick, then conjugate it for more quick: quicker.(If you are asking how to make a comparative adverb, it's just more adverb. For example, more quickly.)
To find the comparative of an adverb, find its root word. Once you have the root word, conjugate it for more. For example, if you are trying to find the comparative for 'quickly,' first find the root, quick, then conjugate it for more quick: quicker.(If you are asking how to make a comparative adverb, it's just more adverb. For example, more quickly.)
you add the '-ly' to the sentence. like, if you say: i ran quick to the store. it doesnt make sense, you have to add the adverb to the word quick. so it would be i ran quickLY to the store.
The suffix -ly changes it from an adjective to an adverb. Thus, instead of modifying a noun (or pronoun), it modifies a verb. We had a quick meeting. The meeting ended quickly.
Add "ly" to make it an adverb.
Adverbs are created from adjectives: quick > quickly, electrical > electrically . . miserable > miserably.
It can be, but the usual (correct) adverb form is quickly.