Sunny is an adjective.
We say:
A sunny day.
A sunny disposition.
The sunny side of the street.
The adverb 'sunnily' has rare but specific uses.
no
The adverb form of the adjective 'tragic' is tragically.
pointy
No, neither word is being used as an adverb. Position is a noun and upright is an adjective describing the position desired.
Jonah is a proper noun.
No. Injured is a past tense verb and an adjective. Verb: Sarah injured her arm. Adjective: Sarah has an injured arm.
Sunny is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: a sunny day.
No, the word "so" is a conjunction. The word "sew" (pronounced like "so"), however, is a verb, meaning to make cloth, etc. with yarn, string, etc.'So' can be either an adverb or a conjunction:This piece is so small that I couldn't pick it up with my fingers.So I used a pair of tweezers to pick it up.
'Sunny' is an adjective. 'Yesterday was sunny, whereas today is cloudy.' 'My sister has a very sunny personality.' 'Sunny' cannot be used as a verb.
The "s" in sunny, is a sound, if you are referring to sunny as in " it's so sunny outside" or a name as in " Sunny and I went to the mall". It just makes a "ess" sound.
in sunny days
sunny
"Sunny" can be written as เคธเคจเฅเคจเฅ in Hindi.
"Hay sol" is "there is sun" or "it is sunny." Sol can also mean sunny.
Sunny is used as an adjective in this sentence.
sunny
what5 happen to sunny
Sunny is a very good break dancer. Sunny has been mentioned in many magazines and many people know who Sunny is.