No it is an adjective
frightening
The verb in this sentence is "peered." It describes the action of the scary face looking out from the window.
The adjectives for the noun and verb scare are scary and scared. The related adverbs are scarily (in a scary manner) and scaredly (in a scared or frightened manner).
The adjectives for the noun and verb scare are scary and scared. The related adverbs are scarily (in a scary manner) and scaredly (in a scared or frightened manner).
Mrs. Walker told scary stories to her class is being said in active voice.
Terrify is a verb. The word itself is not plural. Verbs conjugate based on the number of the subject. Terrify is the plural conjugation for terrify. It's also used for first person singular subjects.
The simple predicate is the verb or the verb phrase in a sentence. In the sentence 'From the window peered a scary face that frightened my little brother' the simple predicate is 'peered'.
a celebrity said scary scary scary
Approachable because it is the opposite of the other synonyms. I disagree with the above response. The word fear does not belong. The word fear is not synonymous with either the word intimidating or the word scary (although the words intimidating and scary are synonymous with each other.) The word fear is used as either a noun or a verb. The other three words, however, are all used as adjectives. The word fear is not used as an adjective. None of the other three words is used as a noun or a verb.
scary scary scary scary scary
No, the word 'frightened' is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to frighten'; the past participle is also an adjective. Examples:verb: We were frightened by the coming hurricane.adjective: The frightened cat jumped behind the sofa.The noun form is fright, an abstract noun, a word for an emotion.