Adverb
it is either a verb or adjective "My thirst is quenched." "I felt great with a quenched thirst."
felt, felt, felt, felt, felt, felt, felt, and felt.
Talking about my love life with my mother felt gauche. Gauchely, he sat next to me. The total gaucheness of the situation made me feel disconcerted. They tried to converse a few times, but it felt . . . gauche. Basically, it means awkward - at least, that's how I use it. :)
After winning a prized victory, the team felt victorious.
War, racism and deathexpansion #1the Nazi party espoused a strong nationalism for the German people and the "Aryan" race, many of whom felt disenfranchised following WW1. The party degenerated into a dictatorial rule by terror form of government with its SS and Gestapo and its policies to those who they felt were not part of the "Aryan" ideal.
The man was confident and felt ardor when he went up for his big speech.
it is a verb because it shows action.
In the sentence 'She replied that she felt better' yes, felt is a correct form in this sentence.
sick
She felt her confidence falter as she stepped onto the stage.
The word abandoned can be used in the following way. When our parents left us with our aunt we felt like we had been abandoned.
The antecedent for the pronouns 'their' and 'they' is class.
She felt disdained.
"I felt the most boiling HATRED I have ever felt."
felt and ran
Technically neither one is incorrect. It is more grammatically correct to use this sentence; He felt he was being mistreated.
That sentence is a declarative sentence, a sentence that makes a statement.