it could be pity, probity, enmity etc
adverb. The ly ending is your clue to adverbs.
Words ending with - ity:active - activityclear - claritycreative - creativitydeform - deformityelastic - elasticityimmense - immensityenormous - enormityfamiliar - familiarityfluid - fluidityformal - formalityfrigid - frigiditygeneral - generalitygrave - gravityhumid - humiditymajor - majorityminor - minoritymoral - moralitymorbid - morbiditypopular - popularitypure - purityrare - rarityreal - realityresponsible - responsibilityscarce - scarcitysevere - severitysober - sobrietysterile - sterilitystupid - stupiditytimid - timidityvary - variety
No, it is an adjective. It is based on the adverb (never) and the present participle of end (ending). It modifies nouns such as "story."
The past participle is a verb ending in -ed that acts as an adjective or adverb.For example:The girl loved the tree because of its crookedbranches.So, the past participle of trim is trimmed.
The definition of an adverb is words and phrases that describe or limit the meaning of a verb, an adjective,or a whole sentence. Adverbs answer the questions when, where, why, in what manner, or to what extent. An adverb is a adjective (usually ending in "ly"), that describes a verb. E.g: The boy ran Swiftly.
Drop the ending 'e' and add the suffix 'ity' to the adjective 'possible' to form the noun possibility.
The noun form for the adjective versatile is versatilness(add -ness) and versatility (drop the ending -e and add -ity).
"-ity"
The suffix -ness added to the adjective 'serene' forms the noun sereneness.The suffix -ity added to the adjective 'serene' (after dropping the ending 'e') forms the noun serenity.
personality, city, probability, possibility
The word tranquility, like all words that end with -ity, is a noun.
Sexuality, personality, reliability..
-ary
The noun form for the adjective obese is obeseness. Obesity is another noun form.
ity + t
Yes it can be (ending lines, ending date).The word ending is the present participle of the verb "to end" and can be a verb, or an adjective, or a noun (gerund).
Examples of nouns formed by adding a suffix to another word are:ness (the adjective fair +ness = fairness)ity (the adjective similar +ity = similarity)ion ( the verb extort +ion = extortion)or (the verb act +or = actor)er (the verb sell +er = seller)ment (achieve +ment = achievement)