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
Both can be genius!
I am a genius
If Cody were a genius, he wouldn't have to use this site. So... no... Cody is not a genius. God no.