Yes, paved can be used as an adjective -- a paved road. It's also the past tense and past participle of pave.
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I read some where that Ben Franklin paved a road by his home or museum. It was not a long road, just a small one.l
It is unknown who came up with the idea to pave roads with concrete. The first concrete paved road was built in 1909 and was Woodward Avenue in Detroit, Michigan.
Probable from the ancient Assyrians.
should be
Both but more likely adverb
should be paved. Better is an adverb
On a paved road.
paved area next to a buildin
Around 2.7 million miles of roads in the US are paved, which accounts for about 64% of all public roadways. This includes major highways, freeways, urban streets, and rural roads.
Chad has the fewest paved roads in Sahel.
Paved Roads
There are roughly 4.1 million miles of paved roads in the United States.
Texas has the most miles of paved roads, i believe it's somewhere around 250,000 miles of paved roads
Yes, it is. Whole Route 66 between Kingman and Oatman is paved.
No. Paved roads cam long after the wheel.
Luxembourg is a well developed country, so it basiclly has paved roads everywhere. I'd say 99,99% of Luxembourg's streets have paved roads.