nerve
nervous
No, it's a adjective.
"Nervous" is an adjective that describes a feeling of worry or anxiety.
It can be. It depends how it is used in the sentence.
Jittery is not a verb but an adjective. Jittery means to feel shaky, nervous, or upset.
The abstract noun form of the adjective nervous is nervousness.
Yes because you are doing something as if your saying I felt the flowers, but if you say Ken felt nervous, it would NOT be a verb!
Worry can be used as a noun or a verb. Noun: New York traffic causes him a lot of worry. Verb: I got nervous and began to worry. It is more frequently used as a verb.
No. Nervous is an adjective. The adverb form is nervously.
TENSE : (noun) the time form of a verb ("present tense") TENSE : (adjective) nervous, pressured, harried ("feeling tense")
hold
She was nervous knowing she had to rappel down the mountain, but she was confident in her training. The word rappel can be used as a noun or a verb.