Yes, it can be. It is the passive past participle of the verb (to elate), used as an adjective.
e.g. Having won the prize money, the elated girl went to the mall to buy a new dress.
It is an adjective.
Elated is an adjective that means very happy, in high spirits, jubilant.
The word elated is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'elate'; The past participle is also an adjective, 'The elated audience cheered'.The noun forms of the verb 'elate' are elation and the gerund, elating.The noun form of the adjective elated is elatedness.
Elated is a verb means to make very happy or proud; cause to be jubilant or in high spirits. Elated is an adjective to describe someone as very happy or proud; jubilant or in high spirits. Example sentences: As a verb: He elated her mood when he brought flowers for their date. As an adjective: The elated crowed cheered wildly when the team finally scored.
Elated is a verb means to make very happy or proud; cause to be jubilant or in high spirits. Elated is an adjective to describe someone as very happy or proud; jubilant or in high spirits. Example sentences: As a verb: He elated her mood when he brought flowers for their date. As an adjective: The elated crowed cheered wildly when the team finally scored.
· earthy · edible · elated · entire · exotic · expert
i am elated that you came to see me elated=very happy
Elated can be used as either a verb or an adjective. Though it is most commonly used as an adjective.A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).An adjective is a word that describes a noun (the car is blue / it was a cold day / etc).
you cant cure people that are elated. elated means their happy
She was elated when he popped the question.
The verb of elated is elate. As in "to elate something".
There is no suffix in elated. There is a prefix e-, a root lat-, and a verb ending -ed.