No, endless is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. The adverb form is endlessly.
It is an adjective (without end, or tediously long). The adverb form is endlessly.
No, endlessly is an adverb. The adjective form is endless.
The word infinity is a noun. It is usually an uncountable noun.
endless-fertile endless-disoderly endless-caring endless-expand endless-destroy endless-limited and endless-painless
Endless.
The universe is endless.
Endless is an adjective.
No, endless is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. Some examples are 'an endless wait for the flight to take off'; 'an endless line at the check out'; or 'an endless pile of bills'.The noun form is endlessness.
1. Adverb Of Time2. Adverb Of Place3. Adverb Of Manner4. Adverb Of Degree of Quantity5. Adverb Of Frequency6. Interrogative Adverb7. Relative Adverb
naturally, elegantly, unnervingly, impressively, staggeringly, strangely, devastatingly, ridiculously, worryingly... the list is almost endless. Your question needs amending. What is the context? Are you describing a man, woman, machine, nature, event, emotion etc
You don't. Its endless, that's the point of it being called endless
"Ever" is an adverb.