No, it is an adverb. It is related to the adjective strict (severe, narrow, or stringent).
No. Lowest is strictly an adjective or adverb.
Not strictly. It's a Spanish participle, which can also serve as an adjective.
Both "I will response to you" and "I will respond to you" are correct, but "I will respond to you" is more commonly used in English. "Response" can be a noun or a verb, while "respond" is strictly a verb.
The word tribute is a noun meaning supplying payments or praise. The verb is "paying" tribute. Its use as a verb would be strictly informal. The related verb is to contribute, with the gerund form contributing.
It is not an adverb, as "they" does not modify the verb "are". "Are" is also an auxiliary verb, so I would say "they're" doesn't strictly qualify as a verb. Remember when dealing with contractions to separate out the words as it makes it much easier to analyse each part. "They" is a pronoun and "are" is a verb.
Strictly speaking, "began" does not have a past participle. The verb is "begin," not "began." The past participle of "begin" is "begun." "Began" is just the past tense of the verb "begin."
No. Strictly speaking, it's the past participle of the verb to yield. But many adjectives are formed from verbs. Take "closed" for example.
No, "audience" is not a verb; it is a noun that refers to a group of people who watch, listen to, or engage with a performance, event, or presentation. The verb form related to "audience" is "to audience," which means to present or perform for an audience, but it is less commonly used. In general usage, "audience" strictly denotes the people experiencing something rather than an action.
Strictly speaking the tense of a verb indicates time, when an action or state of being took place. It will show whether the action is finished or continuing, in the past, at the present or in the future. well, if its past tense, then it already happened, indicating the past. past is time. ANWSER;A. Time
No they are not. They are strictly male and female.No they are not. They are strictly male and female.No they are not. They are strictly male and female.No they are not. They are strictly male and female.No they are not. They are strictly male and female.No they are not. They are strictly male and female.
Sort of. Strictly speaking "to know" is the verb. However in a sentence the word 'know' can be a verb or a noun. eg I know what to do (know is a verb) eg He is in the know (know is a noun)
"To Think" is a verb. Verbs cannot be singular or plural as you can't have a number of "thinks." You can think many thoughts or just one thought, but thinking is strictly an action word.