NO. It's usually a verb.
announced
The word proudly is not an adjective, the word proudly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb; for example to walk proudly, to proudly announce, etc.The adjective form is proud (prouder, proudest).The abstract noun form of the adjective 'proud' is proudness.A related abstract noun is pride.
No, it is not. It can be a verb (to notify, or announce) or a noun (announcement, treatise, or a sharp crack of a sound). The adjective reported (past participle) has the adverb form reportedly.
Announce is the past participle of announce.
The correct preposition to use is "announce in" when referring to a specific place or medium, such as "announce in the meeting" or "announce in the newspaper." However, "announce at" is appropriate when referring to an event or location, like "announce at the conference." The choice depends on the context of the announcement.
announce.
27th of Jan the result will announce
(verb) The studio did not announce who would direct the new film. (verb) The supervisor had to direct his staff not to use their cellphones in the office. (adjective) Columbus sought a direct route to Asia instead of sailing around Africa. (adjective) The police could not get a direct answer from the suspect.
Conceal, suppress are some antonyms of announce
The future tense of announce is will announce.
David Karandish is the CEO of Announce Media.
The teacher announce that tomorrow is a holiday.