The word sensed is the past tense of the verb to sense.
The adjective forms for the noun sense are sensible and senseless.The adjective forms for the verb to sense are sensed and sensing.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
Marty sensed that his baseball team was in trouble. 'sensed' is the verb. sensed. I know that sensed is a verb because you can do this to it: I sense We sense You sense You sense (plural) He senses They Sense She Senses ---- Easy way to remember is that a verb is a doing word. Anything you do is a verb. e.g. ran, walked, read,
The word feel is both a verb (feel, feels, feeling, felt) and a noun (feel, feels). Example sentences:verb: I'm glad to know that you feel better today.noun: I like the feel of this fabric, it will be perfect for the jacket I'm making.
Brief can be an adjective, a noun or a verb.
The word 'census' is a noun. It is not a verb or an adjective.
Eager is an adjective, the noun is eagerness, there is no verb.
No, it is not an adverb. Sensed is a past tense verb (and past participle) that can be used as an adjective. A related adjective that has a different meaning is sensible, whose adverb form is sensibly.
Distribute = verb Distribution = noun Distributable = adjective
Reaction is a noun, reactive is an adjective, but react itself is a verb.
This versatile word can be a noun or verb , and veiled as an adjective.
noun, it is a thing. a verb is what you do and an adjective is discriptive words