It can be either.
It is, along with stricken, a past participle of the verb 'to strike.' It can be used differently from stricken as an adjective,
"Struck" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "strike," which means to hit or come into contact with something forcefully.
It is either a verb or adjective - it is the past tense and one past participle (along with stricken) of the verb "strike". Examples: The car struck him. (verb) A struck coin, a struck batter, a struck pedestrian (adjective)
Adjective.
"brief" can function as an adjective, noun, or verb.
"Large" is an adjective used to describe the size of something; it is not a verb.
it is an adjective!
It is either a verb or adjective - it is the past tense and one past participle (along with stricken) of the verb "strike". Examples: The car struck him. (verb) A struck coin, a struck batter, a struck pedestrian (adjective)
No. It is two words, struck out. It is a past tense verb form combining "struck" (which can be a noun) with "out," an adverb.
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
Adjective.
It can be, in the sense of someone battered, hurt, or hit (e.g. the struck pedestrian was taken to the hospital). This is usually different from the other participle, stricken, also used as an adjective.
peeked a adjective or verb
No, it is an adjective. Breathe is a verb, breathing is a verb too... but then breathable is an adjective, which makes unbreathable an adjective.
It's an adjective.
Restless is an adjective. Restless is not a verb.
Verb: to fascinate Adjective: fascinating
verb of brave?
penetrate is an adjective