should be
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Yes, paved can be used as an adjective -- a paved road. It's also the past tense and past participle of pave.
I read some where that Ben Franklin paved a road by his home or museum. It was not a long road, just a small one.l
It is unknown who came up with the idea to pave roads with concrete. The first concrete paved road was built in 1909 and was Woodward Avenue in Detroit, Michigan.
Probable from the ancient Assyrians.
should be paved. Better is an adverb
the road to hell is paved with good intentions
Religious Zealots paved the way for the end of Slavery.
I walked upon a rocky road dreaming it was paved with gold.
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Both but more likely adverb
The fall of the Berlin Wall paved the way for German reunification.
Streets paved with water do not exist. The phrase "streets paved with water" is often used poetically or metaphorically to describe a place where it constantly rains or where water features are prominent.
Dick Whittington went to London because he believed the streets were paved with gold.
The road hadn't been paved in years, and the numerous potholes joggled the car. The word joggled is a verb.
As we drove along the newly paved highway in South Carolina, I spotted a few palmetto trees in the side of the road.
Shakespeare did not invent the phrase if that is what you mean. The expression goes back at least to 1000 AD and has developed gradually over a thousand years to its present form, helped along by Dr Samuel Johnson of dictionary fame.