The comparative is greater and the superlative is greatest.
The comparative is hotter.
Easier is the comparative.
"Faster" is a comparative of fast. The related superlative is "fastest."
Better
Yes, the word hastily is an adverb.An example sentence is: "the cake was hastily made".
i did the dishes hastily.
There are no perfect rhymes for the word hastily.
She hastily packed her bags and rushed to the airport to catch her flight.
It's obvious that this answer was hastily written.
Hastily is an adverb, not a verb. It doesn't have a tense.
No, "hastily" is an adverb. It describes the way an action is performed, such as quickly or with urgency.
That is the correct spelling of the adverb "hastily" (quickly, in a rush).
bob finished the race hastily to everyone else
The word "hastily" is an adverb. It is used to describe how an action is done.
The root word for "hastily" is "haste," which refers to moving quickly or with speed.
Hastily is already an adverb, the adverb form of the adjective hasty. Synonyms are quickly or hurriedly.