No, it is not. It is a verb, meaning to ask to a meeting or celebration.
(The noun 'invite' is a slang form of the noun 'invitation'.)
It was difficult to figure out which were the invited guests and which were not.
The noun applause has no adjective form. The past participle of the verb (to applaud) is an adjective, applauded. Example sentence:The applauded poet, Neeli Cherkovski, was invited to speak at our school.
Not being able to draw a diagram here, I will do my best to explain it without one. In the sentence "He had invited some people," which is actually a sentence fragment, "He" is the pronoun. "Had invited" is the verb. "Some" is an adjective, and modifies "people," which is the subject.
Forms of the verb to invite are inviting (gerund) and invitation (noun).A different word is the adjective invitiate, meaning not spoiled or corrupted.
There are two anagrams:invitados (plural noun or plural adjective) - invited(s)visitando (present participle) - visiting
The word "you're" is a contraction, a shortened form of the pronoun "you" and the verb (or auxiliary verb) "are".Example:You are invited to my party.You're invited to my party.
The present perfect tense of invited is has invited or have invited.
The present perfect of the verb to invite is "has invited" and "have invited".Examples:I have invited my sisters.You have invited my sisters.He (she) has invited my sisters.We have invited my sisters.They have invited my sisters.
Have/has invited.
The verb to invite has no adverb form. The present participle of the verb, inviting, is a gerund (verbal noun) and an adjective. The past participle of the verb, invited, is an adjective. Another noun form is invitation (sometimes informally called an invite).
we use invited when you have aldready been invited
You and your family are invited.