she notest her younger brother was locked up
The word due is the adjective in the sentence They quickly realized that the paper was due soon.
She was stunned by his response.The officer stunned the suspect with his taser.
Stunned is a verb (past tense of stun) and an adjective (a stunned expression).
I am stunned by your disgusting request!
"I thought about what he'd said soon I realized he was right." Is a run-on sentence. The problem starts where it says "said". This is the proper way of saying it:"I thought about what he'd said, and soon I realized he was right."Or, another correct way:"I thought about what he'd said. Soon I realized he was right."It is because it is two subjects and two predicates.Subject1: IPredicate1: thoughtSubject2: IPredicate2: realizedYou can make them into two complete sentences or separate them with a comma and add a conjunction. The conjunction to the proper way is "and". I hope this helped!
I stunned people with my colorful clothes.
stunned does not occur in the KJV Bible
I was stunned by the score I got on my test today.
Stunned is the past tense and past participle form of stun.
Military cutbacks and western investments.
A bunny will not generally get stunned if you take a picture of it with a flash. They may get scared and freeze momentarily, but they are not stunned in the the classic sense.
Past tense of stun is stunned, as in, "That terrible news stunned me."