The word "eventually" is an adverb.
event
The adverb is eventually, because it modifies the verb arrived.
Verb phrases are groups of words that work together to act as a single verb. A verb phrase consists of one or more helping or auxiliary verbs and a main verb. In questions and negative statements, verb phrases are divided, with auxiliary verbs separated from main verbs. Example: Do you like buttered popcorn? They are not going to the movie.
It can be, as in "I need to cool down" or "The hot oven will eventually cool." Cool is often an adjective.
it is not likely in dictionaries at this time but will eventually, compare to the word faxed, which is a transitive verb
The verb for proof is prove.Other verbs depending on the tense are proves, proving and proved.Some example sentences are:"I will prove this theory"."This proves he did it"."I am proving you wrong"."The theory was eventually proved".
"Spiral" can be a noun as in, "The spring is in the shape of a spiral", or it can be a verb as in, "He would eventually spiral out of control."
The word impact is a noun and a verb. Examples: Noun: The impact shattered the glass but no one was injured. Verb: As its orbit degrades, the satellite will eventually impact the earth.
Noun - book; pronoun - it; verb - to go; adjective - red; adverb - eventually; preposition - on; conjunction - and; interjection - brr!
No, the word "addiction" is not derived from the Roman verb "addicere." It actually comes from the Latin word "addictus," meaning "assigned to" or "dedicated to," which eventually evolved into "addictio" in Latin and later into "addiction" in English.
In middle English the verb "to do" was conjugated as follows: I do Thou doest He doeth or she doeth We do You do They do In Early Modern English, "doeth" became "doth" and eventually "does"
The word 'floating' is the present participle, present tense of the verb to float. The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective and a gerund (verbal noun).Examples:The canoe was floating away from the dock. (verb)The floating balloon eventually disappeared from sight. (adjective)Floating is the first thing I learned in swimming class. (noun)