Accidental is an adjective. The noun form is accident. Accidentally is an adverb. There is no verb variation of the word. You can 'get into an accident', or you can 'have an accident', but there is no single verb 'to accident'.
The adjective form of the noun 'accident' is accidental.
No, accidentally is an adverb. Accidental is an adjective.
It is accidental.
No. The English word "accident", meaning an unexpected event with negative consequences, is a noun. Its adjective form is "accidental".
The word 'accident' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for an unfortunate, unexpected, or unintentional incident; a word for a crash involving vehicles; a word for a thing.
The usual way - remove the ly from the end. The adjective is unfortunate as in an unfortunate accident
The word 'accidentally' is the adverb form of the adjective 'accidental'.The word 'accidental' is the adjective form of the noun accident.
None of the above. It is a noun (unplanned occurrence).The related adjective is accidental, and the adverb is accidentally. There is no verb form.
No, the word 'accidentally' is the adverb form of the adjective 'accidental'.The word 'accidental' is the adjective form of the common noun 'accident'.Example uses:He accidentally missed the turn. (adverb, modifies the verb 'missed')It is said the penicillin was an accidentaldiscovery. (adjective, describes the noun 'discovery')The car was totaled in the accident. (noun, object of the preposition 'in')
"Unsettling" is an adjective that means disturbing or upsetting:The car accident was an unsettling experience.
Yes, it is. It means having stains or spatters of blood, as from some accident or injurious attack.