unsudden
The word 'suddenly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'sudden'.An adverb is a word used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The noun form of the adjective 'sudden' is suddenness.Examples:The car ahead of me suddenly stopped. (modifies the verb 'stopped')The picnic ended when a sudden storm came through. (adjective)The suddenness of her departure surprised everyone. (noun)
sudden The sudden sound made the baby cry.
Exclaim is neither an adverb nor an adjective. It's a verb meaning to cry out or speak suddenly and vehemently.
An adverb typically answers questions such as "how", "when", "where", "how much", or "to what extent". An adverb modifying an adjective will often answer "how" or "to what extent" for adjectives. Here are examples:"Sally noticed the brilliantly colored sunset out the break room window."Brilliantly is the adverb modifying the adjective colored."He described the incident as slamming on his brakes when an extremely black dark suddenly appeared out of the darkness."Extremely is the adverb modifying the adjective black.
No. Suddenly is an adverb. The adjective form of suddenly is sudden.
unsudden
The word 'suddenly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'sudden'.An adverb is a word used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The noun form of the adjective 'sudden' is suddenness.Examples:The car ahead of me suddenly stopped. (modifies the verb 'stopped')The picnic ended when a sudden storm came through. (adjective)The suddenness of her departure surprised everyone. (noun)
The word "suddenly" is an adverb. It is used to describe how something occurs quickly and unexpectedly.
sudden The sudden sound made the baby cry.
Exclaim is neither an adverb nor an adjective. It's a verb meaning to cry out or speak suddenly and vehemently.
Yes suddenly would be considered both an adjective and an adverb. Adjectives describe what, where, when, how. Adverbs describe which one, what time, etc
An adjective
No, "sudden" is not a preposition. It is an adjective that describes something happening quickly or unexpectedly.
An adverb typically answers questions such as "how", "when", "where", "how much", or "to what extent". An adverb modifying an adjective will often answer "how" or "to what extent" for adjectives. Here are examples:"Sally noticed the brilliantly colored sunset out the break room window."Brilliantly is the adverb modifying the adjective colored."He described the incident as slamming on his brakes when an extremely black dark suddenly appeared out of the darkness."Extremely is the adverb modifying the adjective black.
Truncate has many meanings depending on how it is used in a sentence. If it is used as a verb, truncate means to shorten something. If used as an adjective it means it stopped suddenly.
The word "perform" can't have an adjective. Adjectives only modify nouns, and perform is a verb. And adverbs and adjectives are usually the only parts of speech that can transition. Because a verb that describes an action( run, cook, play are some examples), it suddenly describe the noun.