No, "talented" is a past tense verb that can be used as an adjective.
Exceptionally is an adverb, describing talented. Talented is an adjective. Very few word pairs are considered compound adverbs.
More talented and most talented
The guy was talented in making sentances with talented in them.
more talented
Use talented as a verb ex:i am a very talented saxophone player.
Exceptionally is an adverb, describing talented. Talented is an adjective. Very few word pairs are considered compound adverbs.
Basically an adverb adds information about a verb, adjective, or adverb.verbShe ran quietly down the corridor. (How did she run? quietly)adjectiveHe was incredibly talented. (Not only talented, but incredibly so)adverbThey dance very well. (Not just well, but very well)
No, "highly talented" is not hyphenated. "Highly" is an adverb that modifies "talented." You only need to use a hyphen to connect two or more words that function together as an adjective to modify a noun - for example, "top-performing salesman" or "high-dollar suit" would require hyphenation.
More talented and most talented
The guy was talented in making sentances with talented in them.
more talented
Both are talented sportsmen. But, in my opinion, Ronaldinho is more talented
Use talented as a verb ex:i am a very talented saxophone player.
That is the correct spelling of "talented."
Neither sentence has two adverbs. The first sentence, "Bridget owns a huge black dog", doesn't contain any adverbs. The second sentence, "Enrique is an extremely talented baseball player", has only one adverb, "extremely".
A talented answerer may want to become a supervisor on WikiAnswers. A talented dog can juggle! Have you ever heard a talented pianist improvise?
They think that they are talented when somebody tells them that they are.