A CIA spymaster named Orrin DeForest wrote a great book about Vietnam called "Slow Burn." In it he says the North Vietnamese started violating the ceasefire before the ink was dry.
The Tet Offensive in 1968 demonstrated that the North Vietnamese and the Vietcong were not nearing defeat as the United States government had repeatedly claimed. Though their attempt to conquer the country during the offensive failed, it demonstrated that the United States had not been successful in neutralizing the North Vietnamese war effort and convinced many people in the United States that the war could not be won.
Nothing
The battle that convinced the French to help the American's fightwas the The Battle Of Saratoga. An American victory.
No, he can't get over it.
Themistocles.
France
After presenting all the evidence, she was convinced that he was telling the truth.
At first she didn't. However, the Dauphin was at the end of his rope and was willing to try anything. Once she was victorious at Orleans the prince became convinced.
No, convinced is a verb. Example: I hope you are convinced that it's a verb.
The Tet Offensive in 1968 demonstrated that the North Vietnamese and the Vietcong were not nearing defeat as the United States government had repeatedly claimed. Though their attempt to conquer the country during the offensive failed, it demonstrated that the United States had not been successful in neutralizing the North Vietnamese war effort and convinced many people in the United States that the war could not be won.
I was convinced that the man was bluffing
Slowly is not modified by any word in this sentence. But slowly modifies convinced. Slowly is an adverb of manner and it modifies the verb convinced. It tells us in what manner you were convinced.
If they are not convinced now, you need more evidence to support your position.
On the Strength of All Convinced was created on 2005-07-26.
The past participle of convince is convinced.
No, the word "convinced" is not an adverb.The word "convinced" is a verb.The adverb form of the word is convincedly.
Quite apart from throwing suspicion upon the competence of U.S. and South Vietnamese leaders to assess North Vietnamese war-making capacity, the Tet Offensive in the Vietnam War had this significant effect: it convinced numerous leaders and observers in the West that the Vietnam War was far from over. With war protests already growing in the United States yet now increasing, the effect of the Tet Offensive, despite that it was a military defeat, amounted to a diplomatic-political "win" for North Vietnam.