The abstract noun form of the adjective 'silent' is silentness, a word for a quality of absence of sound; a word for a concept.
The related concrete noun form of the adjective 'silent' is silence, a word for the physical state of absence of sound.
It depends. If your using it like: Please keep silent then it would but if you use it like : he was silent; then it is an adjective.
Silent is never a verb. It is an adjective. Other forms can be adverbs or nouns.
In the sentence please keep silent keep is the verb.
Silence can be a verb.
The noun is silence. (The verb to silence means to make silent.)
The noun form for the adjective silent is silentness. Another noun form is silence.
The noun form of the adjective 'silent' is silentness.
A related noun form is silence.
The verb for silent is silence.
Other verbs are silences, silencing and silenced.
"Be silent in the library".
"He silenced his scream".
silence is the noun form of silent, silent is an adjective, adverb form is silently and the verb form is to be silent
Silence
Abstract noun
Yes, silent is an adjective. It is a form of the noun or verb silence.
Yes. The final E is silent. It makes the A a long vowel sound in the verb (DEL-uh-gayt) It does not affect the A sound in the noun. (DEL-uh-guht)
The past tense is "achieved." (a verb's silent E is dropped when adding -ed)
The E in gentle is silent.
there is no silent letters in marvel
silence is the noun form of silent, silent is an adjective, adverb form is silently and the verb form is to be silent
yes there is! the verb for peace means to be or become silent: obsolete.
Quiver is a verb. Therefore, it has no adjectives.
Yes, silent is an adjective. It is a form of the noun or verb silence.
It is neither. The word silently is an adverb, the adverb form of the adjective silent.
You can find a silent s in French when:- it is at the end of words, (most often as a plural mark);- when the 's' is the mark of a verb ending in conjugations;
Yes. The final E is silent. It makes the A a long vowel sound in the verb (DEL-uh-gayt) It does not affect the A sound in the noun. (DEL-uh-guht)
You would spell value with -ing on the end as valuing.When you add -ing to a verb, and that verb has a silent E on the end, you get rid of the E.
The past tense is "achieved." (a verb's silent E is dropped when adding -ed)
The word "knead" (pronounced need) means to work the bread dough.Another homophone for need and knead is the word "kneed" (from verb to knee, also an adjective).
Depending on the sentence, it can change: ex: The march lasted four days. (Noun) They march in silent rows. (Verb)
The O. The same sound is made in the past tense verb tolled, with a silent E.