It is no joke, I am fully awake.
No, the word 'awake' is a verb (awake, awakes, awaking, awoke or awoken) and an adjective (awake, more awake, most awake). The adjective 'awake' is most often functions as a predicate adjective following a linking verb.Examples:I often awake on a day off at the time the alarm rings on a workday. (verb)They were awake and ready when I arrived. (adjective)
The word awake is more often used as an adjective, as in, are you awake? than as a verb anyway, as in, awake! But if used as a verb, the future tense becomes will awaken.
You can write a sentence using the word satellite. Example: Google Earth is a powerful satellite.
The future perfect tense of awake is will have awoken.
why was mama shaking esperanza awake
No, it's," Are you awake?"
He was wide awake this morning
I was awake at midnight The baby was awake playing in her crib. I feel more awake when I drink coffee.
I stayed awake all night when i was extremely tired.....
Your awake, finally! Your being the subject pronoun awake being the verb and finally being your adverb.
The boisterous children have left the building.
Fish ponds, including koi ponds, come awake in the spring after a winter of semi -dormancy.
Maybe, but the question is a little garbled.The following is a complete sentence:Their snoring kept Annie awake. (note the period - without it, the sentence would not be complete)Your example had no indication of where the sentence in question began or ended, and there seems to be an extra A kicking around in there.
Caffeine is found in coffee and helps you to stay awake.
To use the word "dull" in a sentence, you could say: "The lecture was so dull that I struggled to stay awake."
Jessica wants to rest. She is fatigued. She is the opposite of alert and awake.
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