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.
What is the future tense of this sentence, "I work very hard."
I will work very hard.
Both words can be adverbs, and very is definitely an adverb modifying well. Depending on the sentence, well might be an adjective or an adverb. He draws very well. (well is an adverb) He is very well. (well is an adjective)
very very hot
apace adv. [poet] brisk adj. briskly adv. expeditious adj. expeditiously adv. mobile adj. nippy adj. (Brit.) [sl.] prompt adj. quick adj. quickly adv. rapid adj. rapidly adv. slippy adj. spanking adj. speedily adv. speedy adj. swift adj. swiftly adv.
coeval adj. coevally adv. coexistent adj. coincidental adj. coinstantaneous adj. concomitant adj. concurrent adj. concurrently adv. contemporaneous adj. contemporaneously adv. at once gleichzeitig at the same time simultaneous adj. simultaneously adv.
verb
No, its an adjective ---WRONG! ...it can be a Noun, Adj., or Adv.
Bráithriúil (adj.) go bráithriúil (adv.)
An adj. You add the suffix -ly and you get the adv: "exceptionally".
"Gave" is a verb. "A" is an adjective. "Verb" is a noun. "Adv" could stand for an adverb, which modifies verbs.
anseo (adverb) here; abhus (adv. & adj.) here
(adv) thoroughly;(adj) absolute, complete; frank, blunt
"After" can function as both a preposition (followed by a noun or pronoun) and an adverb (modifying a verb).
any [adj' a minimal amount of] = quelque [adj]any [adj' no particular] = quelconque [adj], n'importe quel ...any [adj' one] = un(e) [adj]any [adj' some] = du [art], de la [art]any [adv' in some degree] = d'une certaine manièreany [pron' any one] = quelqu'un/quelqu'une [pron]
The correct spelling of the word "spacious": SpaciousLanguage of origin: latinSentence: This room is very spaciousPart of speech: AdjectiveRelated forms: Spaciously(adv), spaciousness(n), non-spacious (adj)