The word curious is an adjective, along with nasal, as both modify "voice."
No. Broke is a verb (past tense) which is also an adjective (meaning out of money). The past participle is broken which can also be an adjective. There is an adverb form, which is brokenly.
Mr. (noun) Hernandez (noun) angrily (adverb) broke (verb) his (adjective) new (adjective) pencil (noun)
Broke can be an adjective and a verb.
No, the word 'accidentally' is an adverb, a word that describes a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Examples:I accidentally broke the gate when I tripped.When I mixed the leftover paints, it created an accidentally beautiful color.
None of the above. The word 'again' is an adverb a word used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as something occurring or doing something that has occurred or been done previously.Examples:Your mother called again. (modifies the verb 'called')The bills are paid and we're again broke until payday. (modifies the adjective 'poor')Our relationship is once again over. (modifies the adverb 'over')
Not formally. The word broke is the past tense of 'to break' and broken is the past participle used as an adjective (a broken switch).Broke is used colloquially as an adjective to mean "bankrupt" and in the aphorism "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."
It's not Possible.
The noun 'break out' is a singular, common, compound, abstract noun; a word for an eruption of something on the skin; occurrences of an infectious disease; an escape from confinement, monotony, or conformity.
You don't. Something is "irrelevant" or "useless" maybe, but irrelevantly (much like "irregardlessly") is not a word. Irrelevantly is not only a word but it is an adverb, irrespective of what you've heard. Irrelevant is an adjective. The normal way to change an adjective into an adverb is to add ly to the end. Here is your example sentence. He broke the jar of mayonnaise, with the contents spilling all over the floor and then irrelevantly replaced the lid.
Accidentally. She accidentally broke the vase. Adverbs tell us more information about verbs. In the above sentence the adverb tells us about the verb broke. How did she break the vase? - accidentally.
The adverb of the word "important" is importantly.An example sentence is:And more importantly, you broke the law.
In the sentence "The car needed a new battery and Jack was broke", there is no adverb.The sentence can be separated into two independent clauses. "The car needed a new battery" and "Jack was broke".First independent clause:The - articlecar - nounneeded - verba - articlenew - adjectivebattery - nounSecond independent clause:Jack - nounwas - linking verbbroke - predicate adjective