No. The verb stay means to remain. The noun stay can mean a visit, a rope, or a support (collar stay)
It can be, when it means lasting or anchoring (staying power, staying line). Staying is the present participle of the verb to stay (remain, or brace as with a rope or wire), and is more often a verb form or noun (gerund).
No. Stayed is the past tense and past participle of the verb stay. The word stayed can be an adjective (from the noun 'stay' meaning a tie-down).
The word "stayed" is a verb.Some example sentences are:We stayed at the local hotel.The dog obediently stayed where he was told.He stayed behind after school to finish his project.
Sick is normally an adjective She is sick. That ride was sick! :) The sick boy stayed home.
yes It is also a pronoun and an adverb. adverb - He has never stayed out this late. pronoun - This is my cat. These are my tools. adjective - She left early this evening.
The past tense of the verb to stay is stayed(remained).The sound-alike word is the adjective staid (somber, humorless).
No, "stayed" is not an adverb. It is a verb that describes the action of remaining in a specific place or condition.
No, "stayed" is not a preposition. It is a past tense form of the verb "stay." Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence.
Both are correct, depending on the situation. I stayed in my house. I stayed in a hotel. I stayed at the door. I stayed at the starting-line. I stayed at the beach for the weekend. I stayed at my friend's house.
The correct spelling is stayed.
The homophone of Stayed is "stayed."
Because Cecil Calvert stayed in England, they stayed , too.
(Adjective) I don't have your home address. (Adverb) I stayed home with the kids. (Verb) We used the radar to home in on the enemy's position.