No, the word "jealous" is not an adverb. It is an adjective.The adverb form of the word "jealous" is jealously.
If you are getting affected by the efforts the person is putting to make you feel jealous .You think about the same thing repeatedly and get a irritation level .Yes,you are getting jealous den.
CRAZY
yes part of the verb "to be" I am he is she is it is you are we are they are
It is a helping verb.
jealousy
That is the correct spelling of the verb form "envies" (covets, is jealous of).The adjective form is envious.
The noun forms of the adjective 'jealous' are jealousness and jealousy.
By spelling, this resembles the adjective jealous(envious).By sound, this resembles the verb jostle (to bump, shove, or elbow).
The word "jealous" is not a verb and therefore does not have a past tense.
The superlative form is "most annoyed", and the comparative form is "more annoyed".
more than likely you are jealous than her.
jealous = eifersüchtig jealous = neidisch
For the adjective jealous, the comparative forms are 'more jealous' and 'most jealous'.
I would say no... but it depends how jealous he is? why is he jealous?
there are two possibilities: you're jealous now or you're not jealous now (Then you have a personality jealous) soy celoso (you have a personality jealous) estoy celoso (you're jealous now)
jealous = lili