The are any number of verbs that work with enough as an adverb, adjective, pronoun; some examples are:
interrupted?
Sufficient means "enough". If you are going to fill up your car with gas and have $60 to do so, "you have sufficient funds" or "you have enough money"The verb form (to be enough) is to suffice.
The word, "Digging" is a gerund. (jair-und)
Lined is a past tense verb and an adjective. Verb: Tourists lined the streets. Adjective: Please have enough lined paper for the essay.
No, once is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb. Once is also a conjunction, and a noun. Examples:Adverb: We once had a dog, a collie.Conjunction: We will have enough for our trip once our tax refund comes.Noun: Just this once try the green stuff on your plate.
No.
if you are referring to "I have suffered long enough" - yes, it is a verb.
No, the word 'are' is a verb, a form of the verb 'to be'. Examples:We are going to the movies.Bill and Bob are my brothers.You are smart enough to get it.
interrupted?
No, the word 'enough' is not a noun or a verb. The word 'enough' is an adjective, an adverb, an indefinite pronoun, and an interjection.Examples:There's no such thing as enough chips in the cookies. (adjective)If you drive far enough north, you come to the river. (adverb)You may have some, we have enough for everyone. (indefinite pronoun)Enough! It's starting to spill over the top. (interjection)
Encourage is a verb. Encouragement is a noun. Encouraging can be either a verb (he is encouraging the dog to sit) or an adjective (the signs of recovery are encouraging). That is enough encouragement. Kaiser Willy
The verb for the noun friend is to befriend(befriends, befriending, befreinded).Oddly enough, the word 'friend' is the antiquanted verb for 'befriend', which is once again in use as a verb for 'add someone as a friend on a social networking website'.
The word 'enough' as a pronoun is an indefinitepronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for an unnamed 'sufficient amount'.Pronouns function in sentence (the same as nouns) as the subject of a sentence or clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:Enough is when I say it is. (subject of the sentence)The money is enough to get by. (direct object of the verb)The word 'enough' is also an adjective: We have enough homework.The word 'enough' is also an adverb: I can't answerthese questions fast enough.
Sufficient means "enough". If you are going to fill up your car with gas and have $60 to do so, "you have sufficient funds" or "you have enough money"The verb form (to be enough) is to suffice.
The word, "Digging" is a gerund. (jair-und)
Lined is a past tense verb and an adjective. Verb: Tourists lined the streets. Adjective: Please have enough lined paper for the essay.
Lined is a past tense verb and an adjective. Verb: Tourists lined the streets. Adjective: Please have enough lined paper for the essay.