Bent is the past tense and past participle of bend. The participle forms of verbs can be used as adjectives. Example: a bent pipe
No. Bent is a form of the verb "to bend" and is an adjective.
Bent.
The adjective meaning "bent" or "not straight" is spelled crooked.(also used to mean illegal or dishonest)
Bent as a corkscrew.
Your bumper was bent in the accident. The unruly crowd seemed bent on provoking a response from the police. At a young age, the author displayed a bent for archaeology.
No. Bent is a form of the verb "to bend" and is an adjective.
Bent.
Yes, "crooked" is an adjective used to describe something that is not straight or bent. It is often used to describe physical objects or abstract concepts that are not aligned properly.
No, it is not. The word bent is the past tense and past participle of the verb to bend. It may also be used as an adjective.
No, "straight" is not a pronoun. It is an adjective that describes something as not curved or bent.
No, it is not a preposition. The word straight is an adjective or adverb.
The adjective meaning "bent" or "not straight" is spelled crooked.(also used to mean illegal or dishonest)
As an adjective: bent, crooked; distorted, wrong. As a noun: bend, crooked object; crookedness, fraud.
"Hunched" is actually an adjective, not an adverb. It describes the posture or position of someone or something as being stooped or bent over. An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb by providing information about how, when, where, or to what degree an action is performed.
As a noun: bend; crooked object; crookedness, fraud. As an adjective: bent, crooked; distorted, wrong. As a verb: bend, distort.
No, "stooped" is not a verb. It is typically used as an adjective to describe someone who is hunched over or bent forward.
Typically, "bent" is used as an insult as in "get bent." The phrase "get bent" means "get bent over," in other words, "screw you."