No, the word horrific is an adjective. The adverb form is "horrifically" (in a horrible way).
The adverb of horrible is horribly.
An example sentence is: "everything went horribly wrong".
That would be "horribly".
more horrible, most horrible
The verb of horrible is horrify.Other verbs are horrifies, horrifying and horrified."It is absolutely horrifying"."She horrifies me"."I was horrified when I saw him".
Horrid - from the Latin word for to shudder, or tremble
Horrible is an adjective."That English teacher was horrible."Adjectives describe things, people, places, or ideas (aka nouns)horrible, in the example, describes the English teacher as being "horrible."
It can be one - "If you don't do your homework, your teacher will scold you."However, it can also be a noun - "He is a horrible scold."
It's both a verb and a noun, depending on how you use it.Verb: I can smell!Noun: The smell was horrible!
It is an adverb; adverbs describe an action (verb). The picture was horribly drawn. Horribly is describing how the picture was drawn.
Yes, the word 'screeching' is a gerund, a verbal noun, the present participle of the verb to screech that functions as a noun. The present participle of the verb is also an adjective (screeching tires).Example as a noun: "She was startled by that horrible screeching she heard."
Yes, the word 'spitting' is a gerund, the present participle of the verb 'to spit' that functions as a noun. The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:There is a fine for spitting in public. (noun, object of the preposition 'for')"This is horrible", he said after spitting out the sample. (verb)He's the spitting image of his father. (adjective)
horrible histories came first in 1993.then horrible science in 1996 then horrible geoghraphy in 1999
more horrible, most horrible
Same: Horrible
no you are not a horrible person