No. Hopeless is an adjective.
Hopelessly is an adverb.
The adjective forms an adverb by adding -LY to form hopelessly.Example: She felt hopeless. She began to cry hopelessly.
Your a hopeless wreck, since you don't know how to use hopeless in a sentence!!
We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...We found love in a hopeless place...
more hopeless, most hopeless
no because you can not do hopeless run is a verb and you can run but you can not hopeless.
desperato venerem is hopeless romantic
No, the word 'hopeless' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun as without hope.The noun form of the adjective 'hopeless' is hopelessness.The words 'hopeless' and 'hopeful' are the adjective forms of the noun hope.
No, the word hopeless is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: a hopeless situation, a hopeless butterfingers, etc. The abstract noun form for the adjective hopeless is hopelessness.
The word 'utterly' is an adverb used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as completely, without qualification; absolutely.Example Sentences:He utterly gutted the car to install the new engine. (modifies the verb 'gutted')As the floodwater continued to rise, the situation seemed utterly hopeless. (modifies the adjective 'hopeless')Leaning on her cell bars, Rosie silently watched the sunrise, utterly exhausted by her wild night in the Center County Penitentiary. (modifies the adjective 'exhausted')She sang about being utterly, madly in love. (modifies the adverb 'madly')
I am hopeless.
The word "hopeless" is an adjective.
Yes.Definitions of hopeless on the Web: * without hope because there seems to be no possibility of comfort or success; "in an agony of hopeless grief"; "with a hopeless sigh he sat down" * of a person unable to do something skillfully; "I'm hopeless at mathematics" * certain to fail; "the situation is hopeless" * (informal to emphasize how bad it is) beyond hope of management or reform; "she handed me a hopeless jumble of papers"; "he is a hopeless romantic"wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn