The adverb of abrupt is abruptly.
No, the word "abrupt" is not an adverb. It is actually an adjective.The adverb form of the word "abrupt" is abruptly.
Abrupt has two syllables. The syllables are ab-rupt.
abrupt
Discontinuity
''There was an abrupt change in the child's behaviour''The term ''abrupt'' is used as:Sudden and unexpectedIt is also use to show ''Rudeness''It is pronounced as: ab·rupt/əˈbrəpt/Hope that was helpfulBy: Anabela L.
Abrupting is the present participle of the adjective abrupt. Abrupt means sudden and unexpected. A present participle is a conjugate of a word that describes ongoing events at an unspecified time.
The opposite would be sudden or abrupt, so the adjective could be hurried or instant.
1. abrupt 2. abrupt 3. abrupt 4. abrupt 5. abrupt
The correct spelling is "abrupt."
Her answer was very abrupt. I was surprised at her abrupt appearance. The party came to an abrupt end when she accidentally lit the cake on fire. You were quite abrupt to the little girl.
The adverb of abrupt is abruptly.
No, the word "abrupt" is not an adverb. It is actually an adjective.The adverb form of the word "abrupt" is abruptly.
no. abrupt means it happened suddenly and abruply means it happened in an abrupt way.
The car came to an abrupt halt. When he walked up their conversation came to an abrupt end.
the man fell in the ocean in a abrupt way. Her abrupt, unfriendly manner. "If the sensor in one's car detects that a deceleration is too abrupt, it will deploy the air bag."
For reference: an abrupt [a gradual,steady] shift in attitude