Afterward is not a verb. It's an adverb.
The root word for "afterward" is "after."
"Afterward" .. is a preposition which specifies location. Before, in, upon, through, above, within ... etc
Yes, both afterward and afterwards are adverbs.
Afterwards was created on 2009-01-14.
No, "afterward" is an adverb, not a preposition. It is used to indicate time in relation to a past event.
To use "afterward" at the beginning of a sentence, you can simply start your sentence with it, followed by a comma. For example: "Afterward, we went for a walk in the park." This helps to indicate that what you are about to say is a consequence or follow-up to a previous event or action.
Afterward - 2008 is rated/received certificates of: USA:PG-13 (original rating)
bicth
Ensue is a verb with two definitions. 1) to follow in order; come afterward, esp. in immediate succession As the days ensued, he became more restless. 2) to follow as a consequence; result When she stole my bike, a battle ensued.
What did you do afterward?I was destroyed afterward that incident.He was so confused afterward his mother's death.
Three
Subject-verb-objectare the grammatical arrangements of the English and Italian languages.Specifically, the person or thing that is responsible for the action generally comes first in the sentence. The action is revealed next. The person or thing impacted by the action occurs last in both languages if it is a case of nouns. If it is a matter of object pronouns, English will place the object pronoun after the verb whereas Italian - except when the verb assumes the imperative (command) form, in which case the object pronoun is like English in occurring afterward - will put the object pronoun between the subject and the verb.