heavier, heaviest
That is not a question, but a statement. Statements in English are suffixed by period (.), not question mark (?).heavy - heavier - heaviest
It can be, but only as the superlative form of "heavy" used as an adverb. Heavy, heavier, and heaviest are all normally adjectives. But in some rare uses, both heavy and its comparatives can be used as adverbs. e.g. The snow is falling heavier than before. (more heavily) Time hangs heaviest on their shoulders. (most heavily)
very
Some adjectives to describe 'sand falling' might be spilling, trickling, or pouring.
heavy, brassy
Elephants are huge. Elephants are heavy.
Heavier is the comparative adjective for heavy. The superlative is heaviest.
heavier, heaviest
An adverb is the word that describes the adjectives heavy and sweet; for example:very heavy or very sweettoo heavy or too sweetbarely heavy or barely sweet
what are some adjectives on a Christmas tree what are some adjectives on a Christmas tree
If you mean examples, two are: heavy and funny
Big, fat, huge, heavy-set.
Some adjectives that begin with am are:amazingambiguousambitiousamorousamusedamusing
This That These Those are some demonstrative adjectives
Some pairs that mean roughly the same thing: clear - transparent mean - nasty shiny - gleaming clean - tidy weighty- heavy small - little
Some adjectives to describe the noun thoughts are:conclusiveconstructivedeepdisquietinghappyhelpfulinsightfulinspirationalinterestingrestlessscaryweary