The word "hasty" is never a verb. The noun is haste and the verb is to hasten.
Deliberate and hasty as adjectives:
"The change in location was a deliberate choice by the board, although they may have been too hasty in their decision."
Hasty as an adjective and deliberate (consider, discuss, examine) as a verb:
"The jury decided to deliberate rather than reach a hasty verdict."
She deliberately hasted through the task, eager to finish it quickly.
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.
The demonstrative adjective in the sentence is "Those", which is used to indicate a specific set of shoes.
Words that belong to the same part of speech have similar grammatical properties and functions within a sentence. For example, in the sentence "The cat chased the dog," both "cat" and "dog" are nouns, while in the sentence "She quickly ran home," both "quickly" and "ran" are verbs.
Contemporary can be an adjective and a noun. Adjective: From the same time period/modern. Noun: Someone living at the same time.
few" is an adjective. Yes, it is, because it modifies the noun (the noun, in your sentence, being "American".) "Americans" is the subject, because in the sentence, they're the ones doing the action, aren't they? "speak" is the verb, what is being done in that sentence…(what's being done by the subject: Americans) "fluent" is also an adjective. So the answer is not A because there is two adjectives, two words modifying the next word (few, modifying Americans and fluent, modifying French). This is a trick answer for people wondering if "few" is an adjective. The answer is not B either because we already know there're two adjectives. The answer is not C because the verb "speak" could not be an adjective. The answer D is the right one because an adjective is modifying both the subject and the object but it is again a trick question because it seems to imply that it is the same adjective when it's not: the adjective "few" is modifying the subject "Americans" and the adjective "fluent" is modifying the object "French". So the subject and the object are both modified by an adjective (just not the same one…).
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.
You can have an adjective and a verb in the same sentence but adjectives go with nouns, they describe nouns egadjective -- bignoun -- dogI saw a big dog. In this sentence the verb is saw.adjective -- interestingnoun -- storyI read an interesting story. In this sentence the verb is read.
The sly, brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
Yes, for example: John (noun) is happy (predicate adjective).
Noun clauses are found anywhere in the sentence and perform the same functions in sentences that nouns do:subject of a verbobject of a verbsubject complementobject of a prepositionan adjective complement
Same is an adjective.
deliberate, designed, fashioned, intended, knowing, meant, voluntary, willful
Not exactly. A predicate nominative (the noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates the subject of the sentence) can be a subject complement; but a subject complement can also be a predicate adjective (the adjective following a linking verb which describes the subject of the sentence).In other words, a subject complement can be a predicate nominative or a predicate adjective.
quick, swift, rapid, accelerated, hasty, hurried etc
Compound adjectives are formed when you use two or more adjectives that are joined together with a hyphen to modify the same noun. She had a three-year-old cat is an example of a compound adjective in a sentence.
Both uniform (meaning the same size) and bright might be adjectives, depending on the sentence. In a sentence talking about bright buttons, it is more likely that the word uniform is a noun (clothing).