No.
Haunted, meaning a place frequented by a ghost, is an adjective.
A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
An adjective is a word that describes a noun (the car is blue / it was a cold day / etc).
No, it is not an adverb. Haunted is a past tense verb or an adjective, from the verb to haunt.
No, it is not an adverb. Haunted is a past tense verb or an adjective, from the verb to haunt.
The object can be whatever you choose. egThe ghost haunted the house / castle / hotel / town hall / tower / cellar / classroom / pub / etc
yes. its actually a verb and adjective. in this sentence "I an haunting you" its an action, a verb. In this one"This is haunting"you are describing your experience, its an adjective.
The past participle is the form of a verb that can act as an adjective, be used to create the perfect tenses, and form the passive voice. For regular verbs, past participle end in -ed.The past participle of haunt is haunted. (i.e. the haunted house)
This is a passive sentence. The actors are after the preposition "by" and the verb is "BE + Participle". The active version is: Ghosts haunt the old castle.
Maybe some places in Connecticut are haunted, but No, Connecticut is not haunted.
haunted.
No blackpool is not haunted to me
The old Yankee stadium in Bronx is haunted,the Lincoln hotel is haunted,Shea stadium is also haunted. The old Yankee stadium is haunted
My Haunted House - 2013 Haunted Affair was released on: USA: 2014
There is a possibility that docks can be haunted. You do not hear of many haunted docks, but you often hear of haunted ships which are located at docks so you would think the dock is haunted too.