The word 'very' is both an adverb and an adjective (but not a noun). Example uses:Adverb: She is a very pretty girl.Adjective: That is the very girl that I am going to marry.
You add -ly to a verb.-quickly-stupidly-wildly~♥~Reader58Thank you for reading my answer!
No, "complex" is an adjective. The corresponding adverb form is "complexly."
Difficult is an adjective.
Adverb
adverb i think but i am pretty sure it is an adverb
The word good is an adjective. The word pretty (meaning fairly) is colloquially an adverb here, modifying good, although it is typically an adjective. Together they will modify a noun.
It can be either depending on its use. Pretty is an adjective when it modifies a noun to mean attractive or nice-looking (e.g. pretty girl). The colloquial use is as an adverb, to mean "fairly" or "somewhat" (e.g. we are pretty busy, it failed pretty badly).
The word "pretty" can function as both an adjective and an adverb.
No. Prettier is a comparative adjective (more pretty). An adverb form is prettily / more prettily.
Pretty is primarily an adjective (attractive, nice-looking, for a female), but can also colloquially be an adverb meaning "considerably"-- e.g. "It was pretty cold last night."
mooi = beautiful pretty = vrij (adverb)/ knap (adjective)
The word good is an adjective. The word pretty (meaning fairly) is colloquially an adverb here, modifying good, although it is typically an adjective. Together they will modify a noun.
No, -ful can be added to a noun to form another noun or an adjective. Examples: spoon (noun) spoonful (noun) hope (noun) hopeful (adjective) Usually, the suffix -ly is added to an adjective to create an adverb. Examples: usual (adjective) usually (adverb) hopeful (adjective) hopefully (adverb)
The word 'very' is both an adverb and an adjective (but not a noun). Example uses:Adverb: She is a very pretty girl.Adjective: That is the very girl that I am going to marry.
When an adverb is used to modify an adjective alone (a noun does not follow the adjective), it's called an adjectival phrase.Example:The soup is very hot.the adverb 'very' modifies the adjective 'hot';the adjectival phrase is functioning as a predicate adjective (also called a subject complement) following the linking verb 'is'.When an adverb is used to modify the adjective that's describing the noun, it's called a noun phrase.Example: She's wearing a very pretty dress.the adverb 'very' modifies the adjective 'pretty';the adjectival phrase 'very pretty' describes the noun 'dress' forming the noun 'phrase';the noun phrase 'a very pretty dress' is functioning as the direct object of the verb 'wearing'.
Dark can be an adjective or a noun. Darkly is an adverb.