The word immediate, meaning "at that given moment", is an adjective.
The word immediately, meaning "at that given moment" is an adverb.
The adverb form of the adjective immediate is immediately (right now, without delay).
Yes, it can be (instant gratification, instant coffee).The adjective is based on the noun instant, meaning a very short period of time. A similar noun is instantaneous (occurring in an instant, or immediately).
The adjective form is "misconnected", with no immediately-apparent synonyms. In electrical systems, the word "cross-wired" is used.
No, the word 'soon' (sooner, soonest) is an adverb, a word used to modify a verb, an adjective or another adverb.Example functions:We will open soon. (modifies the verb 'will open')All of the soon obsolete models are on sale. (modifies the adjective 'obsolete')We'll be there soon enough. (modifies the adverb 'enough')
One answer that comes immediately to mind is Read and Able - forming the word readable. There must be many many more.
Yes. It can modify a verb or an adjective. It is the adverb form of the adjective immediate.
no, not unless its a proper noun or adjective.
The adverb form of the adjective immediate is immediately (right now, without delay).
It is an adverb for example- "He ran immediately after swimming in the Iron Man race."
Yes, it can be (instant gratification, instant coffee).The adjective is based on the noun instant, meaning a very short period of time. A similar noun is instantaneous (occurring in an instant, or immediately).
The politician remained intransigent, refusing to compromise on the controversial issue despite pressure from his colleagues.
The adjective form is "misconnected", with no immediately-apparent synonyms. In electrical systems, the word "cross-wired" is used.
Refund is a noun because it is a thing, a verb because it is an action, and an adjective because it can modify a noun. Are you going to receive a refund? (noun) I want you to refund my money immediately. (verb) When are the refund checks being mailed? (adjective)
No, the word 'soon' (sooner, soonest) is an adverb, a word used to modify a verb, an adjective or another adverb.Example functions:We will open soon. (modifies the verb 'will open')All of the soon obsolete models are on sale. (modifies the adjective 'obsolete')We'll be there soon enough. (modifies the adverb 'enough')
One answer that comes immediately to mind is Read and Able - forming the word readable. There must be many many more.
As a noun: I gave her some work to keep her busy and out of trouble. As a verb: I work for a living. As an adjective: A work related injury should be reported immediately.
"Beautiful ocean" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase bell'oceano.Specifically, the masculine adjective bello* means "beautiful, handsome." The masculine noun oceano means "ocean." The pronunciation is "BEHL-loh-TCHEH-ah-noh."*The vowel o drops before a noun that begins with the same vowel. The temporary nature of that drop is indicated by an apostrophe immediately after the last letter in the adjective and immediately before the first letter in the following noun.