The sly, brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
No. Technically, "annoyed" is the past participle of the verb "annoy." However, you can use "annoyed" as an adjective, such as in the sentence, "I am annoyed." The verb in this sentence is "am," which links "I" and "annoyed." Thus, "annoyed" describes "I."
as a adjective or an adverb: 1) his work was very meticulous-adjective because it is describing his work 2) he worked meticulously on his project-adverb because it it describing his working
As an adverb: When the earthquake began the ground is shook powerfully.As an adjective: He likes to drive a powerfully built car.
the white polar bear ran briskly to catch the fish
relaxing: adjective, relax: verb and relaxation: noun. No idea for the adverb, though.
Yes, you can use an adjective and adverb in the same sentence. For example: "She quickly ran to the bus stop." In this sentence, "quickly" is the adverb describing how she ran, and "bus stop" is the adjective describing the type of stop.
There is an adjective in that question. An adjective describes a noun or a pronoun. In some cases, the same word can be either an adjective or an adverb.
An adjective is used to bring together two independent clauses that are closely related in thought, in a single sentence. A conjunctive adverb is an adverb that does the same thing.
an adverb is a part of speech that describes a verb, as an adjective describes a noun.
The word below can be an adjective, adverb or preposition. It is an adverb in the sentence: "To see another example, look below."
It's an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. It's also overused.
You can use an adverb to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.A nonspecific adverb, such as really or totally, can become entirely overused in everyday speech.
"I pay my telephone bill monthly." (pronoun, verb, possessive adjective, noun, noun, adverb)
The word VERY means greatly or extremely. VERY is mainly used to further explain an adjective or adverb. It virtually always directly precedes the word it modifies.In this sentence: "I ran my lap very fast," VERY is an adverb that describes the adverb FAST.In this sentence: "John is very sick" the adverb VERY describes the adjective SICK.
It is an adjective. To use it as an adverb, you would add -LY (vacantly).
No. Technically, "annoyed" is the past participle of the verb "annoy." However, you can use "annoyed" as an adjective, such as in the sentence, "I am annoyed." The verb in this sentence is "am," which links "I" and "annoyed." Thus, "annoyed" describes "I."
He quickly climbed on the idling machine and roared off into the sunset.quickly - adverbclimbed - verbidling - adjective