missed
The word missing can be an adjective and a verb. The adjective form describes something or someone that cannot be located. The verb form is the present participle of the verb miss.
under the verb. call it IO
The word 'scanty' is an adjective (scanty, scantier, scantiest), that describes a noun as limited; barely enough; meager, insufficient; inadequate. The noun form for the adjective scanty is scantiness. The adverb for for the adjective scanty is scantily. There is no verb form for the adjective scanty.
The direct object of the verb 'found' is 'a pail and some soap'.The indirect object of the verb 'found' is the prepositional phrase 'under the sink'.
No, the word 'screamed' is not a noun. The word 'screamed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to scream. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:The people screamed as they flew off the end of the water slide. (verb)The officer's screamed commands could barely be heard over the wind and the storm. (adjective)The word 'scream' is also a noun, a concrete noun as a word for a physical sound or voice.
missed (it is a normal verb: miss, missed, missed)
No, it is not. the word miss is a title, a noun (not a hit), or a verb (to not hit a target, or to feeling longing).
"Nail" can be a verb when it is used to describe the action of hitting or securing something with a nail or to achieve something successfully. For example, "She nailed the presentation," means she did an excellent job.
The verb should be past tense, missed. We missed you at the wedding.
The word must've is a verbcontraction, a shortened form of 'must have'.The contraction must've functions as a verb or auxiliary verb in a sentence.Example:We must have missed our turn.We must've missed our turn.
nail
missed is the simple past tense had missed is the past perfect tense
There are basically 4 positions: before the subject - Occasionally Jon missed the bus. after the auxiliary or be verb - Jon is occasionally late for the bus. Jon has occasionally missed the bus. before the main verb - Jon occasionally missed the bus. end of the clause - Jon missed the bus occasionally. It depends on the type of adverb where they go. Some such as occasionally (above) can go in all positions.
No its a noun (retardation is downfall)
It is neither. It is an adverb, and will modify a verb, adjective or adverb.
No, it is an adverb. Like scarcely, it implies a narrow sufficiency or opportunity.Examples:We could barely see the ship at that distance.We barely made it to the train on time.There was barely enough milk left for breakfast.
Yes, missed is a verb (miss, misses, missing, missed). Missed is also an adjective. Example uses: Verb: I'm late because I missed the bus. Adjective: That was a missed opportunity.