Cleanly. But it doesn't relate to being free from dirt (clean) or to cleaning. He hit the ball cleanly into the bleachers. She lifted the box cleanly from the floor.
shuchiH(n,f) is the Sanskrit word for clean. In English the word clean is an adjective [as in 'a clean cloth'] and an adverb [as in 'This place is clean' and How is this word to be used? prAtarutthAya shuchirbhUtvA...(= wake up in the morning and having 'freshened up' (having become clean)... Thus this covers the adverbial use of clean.When there is need to use clean as an adjective- shubraM vastram [ Clean Cloth; incidentally this also means white cloth i.e. shubhram also means white!
The adverb for "serious" is "seriously".
The adverb of nasty is nastily.An example sentence is "she nastily insulted her rival".
One adverb is sensibly (in a manner showing "sense") formed from the adjective sensible.There is no adverb form for the adjective sensory (detected by a sense).The adjective sensual (focused on the senses) has the adverb form sensually.
Yes, it can be. But normally the adverb is cleanly. Colloquially, clean may be misused to mean "cleanly."However, it can be used to mean "until clean" and is an adverb in these cases.Examples:"wipe the slate clean""scrub the floor clean""wash the dishes clean"
It is cleanly.
Cleanly. But it doesn't relate to being free from dirt (clean) or to cleaning. He hit the ball cleanly into the bleachers. She lifted the box cleanly from the floor.
No, it is not a preposition. The word clean is a verb, adjective, or adverb.
Since it answers the question 'When?', the clause functions as an adverb.
No, "housekeeper" is not an adverb. It is a noun that refers to a person hired to clean and maintain households.
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The abstract noun form of the verb to clean is the gerund, cleaning.The abstract noun form of the adjective clean is cleanness.The abstract noun form of the adverb cleanly is cleanliness.
No, an adverb typically modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb by providing information on how, when, where, or to what extent an action is performed. Nouns are typically modified by adjectives, articles, or other nouns.
Adverb: She danced gracefully across the stage, twirling and leaping with elegance. Hyperbole: I've told you a million times to clean your room, but you never listen!