blissfully, blithely, brightly, buoyantly, cheerfully, contentedly, delightedly, delightfully, devotedly, elatedly, enthusiastically, exhilaratingly, exultantly, freely, gaily, gladly, gleefully, graciously, heartily, hilariously, jovially, joyfully, joyously, laughingly, lightheartedly, lightly, lovingly, merrily, optimistically, peacefully, playfully, pleasantly, sincerely, smilingly, sportively, vivaciously, willingly, with relish, with zeal, zestfully
Compound words with "other" include otherwise, other than and each other.
Myself, me
The other words can one use other than confused are deranged, confounded, blended, mixed, disordered etc.
The comparative form of "happily" is "more happily." In English grammar, adverbs like "happily" form comparatives using the word "more" rather than adding a suffix like "-er." This structure is used for most adverbs with two or more syllables, as well as for adverbs ending in "-ly."
there is alot of words you can use for scared such as terrified or
awesome
i apologize
Happily is an adverb, because it modifies the verb it is paired with ("lived happily ever after", "skipped happilydown the street"). Happy is the adjective as it describes something rather than modifying it ("she looked very happy").
others, some people
Mad, twisted
Thank You
extremely