The rebels are getting desperate now.
I am desperate for a jolly cup of hot Earl Grey tea.
She was so desperate for the toilet that she barged through the queue.
Desperate times call for desperate measures.
I assume you meant "desperate". Example: I was so desperate for food that I would have been willing to eat asparagus.
No, the word desperate is not an adverb. This is an adjective.The adverb of the word desperate is desperately.An example sentence is: "Scott desperately needs a cup of tea".
He was so desperate for attention that he screamed from the rooftops.It was a very desperate situation for everyone involved.We are desperate for financial support.There are millions of people who are desperate for food and water.
I despairingly entered my question at WikiAnswers for help with finding a sentence containing the word 'despairingly' because I was SO desperate that I forgot that the dictionary may well have a good example right there with the word's definition. Her sigh was despairingly disturbing.
My feet are in desperate need of a pedicure.
Example sentence with the word "advise":"I would advise you not to do that."
This is an example of a sentence using the word breakfast.
No, the word 'desperate' is an adjective; a word that describes a noun.The noun forms for the adjective desperate are desperateness and desperation.Nouns (and pronouns) function as the subject of a sentence or clause or the object of a verb (direct or indirect) and the object of a preposition.
This is an example of an exclamatory sentence using the word happening!
There was a desperate and sanguinary struggle in which the Indians must have suffered heavily.
Lala Loopsy was desperate to get the money.