No. Genius is a noun.
There isn't one, but 'ingeniously' basically means the same thing as 'geniusly' would if it was a word.
The word 'et' means and when its role in the sentence is as a conjunction. It means also when its role is as an adverb. The meaning of the entire sentence 'Ask a genius the meaning of the word et' is Roga ingenium significationem verbi 'et'. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'roga' means '[you] ask, are asking, do ask'. The noun 'ingenium' means 'genius'. The noun 'significationem' means 'meaning'. The noun 'verbi' means 'verb'. The word 'et' means 'and' as a conjunction, 'also' as an adverb.
genius, genius, brillance, genius, genius..........
"I am genius".
Yes, he was a genius
GENIUS
Genius is correct.
"Genius" is the object complement in the sentence 'Hallee called Bob a genius'. It renames or describes the noun "Bob".
1. Adverb Of Time2. Adverb Of Place3. Adverb Of Manner4. Adverb Of Degree of Quantity5. Adverb Of Frequency6. Interrogative Adverb7. Relative Adverb
I am a genius
Both can be genius!
If Cody were a genius, he wouldn't have to use this site. So... no... Cody is not a genius. God no.