No, it is an adjective. The adverb form is hungrily.
Are is the present tense plural form of be verb. am / is / are I am tired and hungry. He is tired and hungry. They are tired and hungry.
No, it is not a verb. Hungrily is an adverb.
Hungry is not a verb and does not have a past tense. Hungry is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.
The MEANING is from Latin. It means "in relation to a word" (ad-verbum). Adverbs are the parts of speech that modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs. Infinitives, phrases, and clauses can also function as adverbs.
Hungry is an adjective. The corrseponding nouns are hungriness and hunger, the corresponding adverb is hungrily.A proper adjective is one that is capitalized. So the country is Hungary and the proper adjective is Hungarian.
An adverb is a word that describes a verb. In your sentence, "well" is the adverb. You could say "Jonathan is a good swimmer". In that sentence, "good" is the adjective. Someone has given you one of the most difficult adverbs. Check out these easy adjective/adverb pairs: slow/slowly, smooth/smoothly, quick/quickly, hungry/hungrily, bad/badly
The cat seems hungry, evidently I forgot to feed him.
There are two adverbs in the sentence "He ate hungrily and rapidly." Hungrily and rapidly both explain the manner and time of the action, and they both end in ly, so they are adverbs.
am is a be verb. The present be verbs are: am -- I am hungry is -- He is hungry. She is hungry. It is hungry are -- They are hungry. We are hungry. You are hungry. The past be verbs are: was -- I/he/she/it was hungry were -- They/we/you were hungry.
Adesso ho fame is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I'm hungry now." The adverb, present indicative verb, and feminine singular noun literally translate into English as "Now I have hunger." The pronunciation will be "a-DES-so oh FA-mey" in Italian.
present - am / is / are - I am hungry. She is hungry. They are hungry. We are hungrypast - was / were - I was hungry. He was hungry. They were hungry. We were hungrypast participle - been - I have been hungry. She has been hungry. They have been hungry
In a typical sentence, the subject (the one who performs the action) is usually a noun, and sometimes a pronoun. The action that the subject does is usually a verb. The boy ate his lunch. The doer of the action is "boy" and what action he did is "ate." But we can make the sentence more interesting by describing the noun-- which requires an adjective; or describing the verb-- which requires an adverb. So, the hungry boy ate his lunch quickly. Hungry is an adjective-- it tells us more about the boy. And quickly is an adverb, which tells us more about the verb.