I am stressed.
In the sentence the speaker is descrbing his emotional state. You would not say"I am a stress person." You would need the participial form "stressed".
States of emotion are nominative: happiness, stress, depression, anxiousness, listlessness, nervousness, cheerfulness, remorse, guilt, forgiveness
Many can be used as verbs, which have participial forms. Ex: He stresses me. He depresses me. He forgives me. He cheers me.
If the speaker says ,"I am stress," the implication is that the speaker is personifying the abstract noun, much like saying, "I am death."
Just as one would describe a dead person with a modifier form, not death, the correct form would be a stressedperson, not stress. A native speaker would always make this distinction.
The issue is not grammar, but pronunciation. In words beginning with h but not stressed on the first syllable the h may be silent.
It can be (stressed individuals, stressed vowels). Stressed is the past participle of the verb (to stress).
No, "will be had" is not a correct grammar. The correct grammar would be "will have."
Stressed is a verb (past tense of stress) and an adjective (stressed syllable).
stress is the root word for stressed
No, it is correct grammar, not a correct grammar.
The correct grammar is: "Are those correct?"
"On a train" is correct grammar.
If you are not stressed, you're unstressed.
no_____If the sentence is You do do that (meaning You are in the habit of doing that) the grammar is perfectly correct and the sentence 'does have correct grammar'.
"July has just been started" is not correct grammar, instead the correct grammar is "July has just started."
* a mark indicating stress through the head and body * Causing any damages to your body witch usually adjust to an insanity attack. * or having seizures and pain like migraines