correct
Correct is the adjective; correctly is the adverb.
i had to be pretty sharp to answer the word problem correctly.
The word "an" will correctly complete the analogy. "Shock" is an adjective describing "jar", so the word that completes the analogy should be a word that describes "vessel."
No, the word "good" is only correctly used as either an adjective, e.g., "A good boy," or a noun, e.g., "For the common good."
The adjective form is "misconnected", with no immediately-apparent synonyms. In electrical systems, the word "cross-wired" is used.
The word is spelt as you have done in the question.
Well, cooly is if you meant the adjective. Your spelling of the words "woed" (word I presume) and "speled" (spelled) are a bit off though.
The correct spelling of the word is Illiterate which means: Adjective: Unable to read or write. Noun: A person who is unable to read or write.
Correttamente is an Italian equivalent of the English word "correctly".Specifically, the word is an adverb. It is formed by adding the adverb ending -mente to the feminine adjective corretta ("correct"). The pronunciation will be "kor-RET-ta-MEN-te" in Italian.
Yes, if used correctly.
That is the correct spelling of "ridicules" (makes fun of). The adjective form of the word is "ridiculous" (absurd, silly).
'Successfully' can be used as an adjective, like this: "I managed to get the door open successfully." 'Successful' is something that someone has done correctly or they have done it well, but it's not an adjective; "She's been so successful." Remember, an adjective is always a word to describe, which means that successfully can be an adjective, but success on its own cannot.