No, not in the traditionally formal sense. The word "very" is used to quantify an adjective or an adverb. "Fun" is a noun so "very fun" is not correct. You could use "very funny" or "a lot of fun" depending on the context.
Colloquially, though, "very fun" is a common term and we all know what it means. And if you intend the adjective "much" to be understood, then you even could argue for it's correctness.
The party was so [much] fun. The party was very [much] fun.
No, because "fun" is a noun, not an adjective. 'Really fun' or "A lot of fun" would be correct.
'So fun' would be correct in most instances. For example, 'It was so fun'.
In British English, the correct spelling is appetising.In American English, the correct spelling is appetizing.An example sentence is: "The starter was very appetising".
"It is really fun" means it truly is fun. "It is real fun" means it is genuine fun. Real fun may sound ignorant to some, who mistake fun for an adjective properly modified by an adverb. In fact, fun is a noun, properly modified by an adjective.
It depends on where it is used:'Both the parents are working' is not as good as 'Both ofthe parents are working'.'Both the parents and the children had fun' is correct.
"I'm fine (or very well), thank you"
'So fun' would be correct in most instances. For example, 'It was so fun'.
It depends on the sentence. "This game is very fun." Would be correct. and "This game is so much fun" Would also be correct. So to answer your question, either would be right.
Yes, saying "that's so true" is correct informal English. It is a common way to agree with someone or acknowledge the accuracy of a statement.
很好玩. Literal: Very fun.
In British English, the correct spelling is appetising.In American English, the correct spelling is appetizing.An example sentence is: "The starter was very appetising".
"It is really fun" means it truly is fun. "It is real fun" means it is genuine fun. Real fun may sound ignorant to some, who mistake fun for an adjective properly modified by an adverb. In fact, fun is a noun, properly modified by an adjective.
It depends on where it is used:'Both the parents are working' is not as good as 'Both ofthe parents are working'.'Both the parents and the children had fun' is correct.
"I'm fine (or very well), thank you"
Yes it is. It has a slightly casual style not suited to very formally written English.
Wow, that was fun!
No, it is not grammatically correct to say "what a fun." It should be corrected to "What fun!" to make it grammatically accurate.
most fun