Yes, it is.
Remind is a regular verb; therefore, its past participle is reminded.
No, it is not. Reminded is the past tense and past participle of the verb to remind, and does not lend itself well to use as an adjective.
No, the word 'reminded' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to remind. The past participle of the verb functions as an adjective.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: Mother reminded me to pick up some egg. She needs them to bake a cake. (the pronoun 'she' takes the place of the noun 'mother' in the second sentence)
The phrase "will remind" is a verb in future tense. The verb "will" is an auxiliary verb; the verb "remind" is a main verb.Example: I will remind Mona that the meeting is today.
It will depend on the context. We have reminded you to pay this bill several times. The striking of the hour has reminded me that we promised to end the meeting by ten o'clock.
I have been feeling very nostalgic lately.Nostalgic is an adjectiveand there is no verbform of nostalgic.
I can give you several sentences.I reminded him to finish his homework.She needed to be reminded to brush her teeth every day.When you reminded me, I remembered what I wanted to do.
We say It reminds me why I left. "Of" is used when the object is a noun, as in It reminds me of home
As a verb, caress means primarily "to touch, stroke, etc. affectionately, or in a manner suggesting affection". In a sentence, it may be used like so: He reached over and caressed his lover's saxophone, reminded fondly of how poorly she used to play it.
Because they were reminded of their ansestors and they also reminded them of there wealth
why is the poet reminded of a elephant when he sees a train
The word reminded has three syllables. Re-mind-ed.