No. Wonderful is a descriptive word so it is an adjective. A verb is an action word eg. ran walk sang
No. Wonderful (full of wonder, commonly used to mean superb) is an adjective.The adverb is wonderfully.
The comparative of wonderful is "more wonderful". The superlative of wonderful is "the most wonderful."
more wonderful, most wonderful
more wonderful, most wonderful
More wonderful most wonderful
wonderful is not a verb
No, wonderful is not a verb at all.The word wonderful is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.Examples:It's a wonderful day.This is a wonderful movie.A wonderful time was had by all.
The verb is have.
The possible words include:greet - (verb) to welcomegreat - wonderful, excellent, or magnificentgrate - (verb) to grind or shred (noun) a perforated grill
"had been" is a helping verb combination used to form the past perfect tense in English. It is not used as a linking verb.
The word I've is a contraction; a combination of the pronoun 'I' and the verb 'have' and acts as the subject and the verb of a sentence or phrase. Example:Thanks, I've had a wonderful time.
The word marveled is a regular verb. It is the past tense of the verb marvel.
No. Wonderful (full of wonder, commonly used to mean superb) is an adjective.The adverb is wonderfully.
The word wonder is a verb. The past tense is wondered. Wonder can also be a noun.
Actually, love can be two parts of speech, depending on how it is used. It can be a noun (an abstract noun) or it can be a verb. As a noun: Love is a wonderful thing. As a verb: I love my husband very much.
This milk tastes sour.The dessert tasted wonderful.
English infinitives are formed with the word, "to" followed by the verb. Infinitives serve as noun clauses in sentences.Examples: It is wonderful to be in Paris in the springtime.I want to go home.I love to play baseball.