No, the word "talking" is a verb. It is the present participle of "to talk".
The word talked is a verb.The adverb is excitedly, which modifies the past tense verb talked.
The young girl talked about her dad sadly when he died
It could be either: The hours after the hike were mostly spent recuperating. (adjective) The scoutmaster talked to the boys after the hike. (adverb)
No, you can't say something like he talked fat. It is an adjective or a noun But you can say something like he grew fat!
No, "talked" is not an adverb. It is a verb, specifically the past tense of "talk." Adverbs typically modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs to provide more information about how an action is performed.
The adjective in a sentence is the word that describes the subject (the subject is the basic thought that is being talked about in a sentence). Last night at the promenade, Beatriz looked truly lovely in her dark blue taffeta dress. Beatriz is the subject. Lovely is the adjective because it describes Beatriz. red
who had talked is the correct answer as other two forms of talk are talked ,talked
From the verb hablar. The preterit form is hablé (I talked), hablaste (you talked - informal), habló (he/she/you formal talked), hablamos (we talked), hablastais (you all, informal talked)hablaron (they talked)
They were both angry, but then they talked things out. My mom talked to the cashier about the new coupons. I talked to my dad on the phone every morning.
talked
The past tense of "talk" is "talked."
Span is a verb, noun, and an adjective. verb - The new bridge will span the river. His acting career spanned 55 years. noun - I talked to him over a span of six years. Small children have a short attention span. adjective - Her apartment was always spick and span.