No. Daily can be: 1. an adjective -- The daily wage is $25.00. 2. a noun -- He reads the dailies every morning. (here daily means news paper). 3. an adverb -- He used to phone daily.
Yes, it can be as in a "jogged memory," but for the most part jogged is the past tense verb to the regular verb jog- as in- She jogs daily down her street.
Two nouns for the noun 'day' are yesterday and today.
Yes, the word 'cried' is a verb, the past tense and past participle of the verb to cry. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.example use of the adjective:Her cried tears didn't solve the problem.The daily news was once delivered by cried messages in the streets.The present participle or the verb also functions as an adjective.example: The woman held her crying baby.
Journey is most often a noun - travel to another place. It can be a verb, to journey is to travel It is used as an adjective as part of the noun journeyman, meaning a man who is hired by the day, or who has completed an apprenticeship, but not yet become a master of his craft. It is not used as an adjective by itself. Note. in the word journeyman it signifies daily, not travelling.
No, advertise is a verb, as it connotes an action. If you advertise daily, daily is an adverb because it describes the verb advertise.
Yes. Can be, depends on context. He shines the bumpers daily-action/verb. It shines in the sun. no action/not a verb.
The voice of the verb "are groomed" in the sentence is passive. It focuses on the action being done to the ski slopes by an unspecified subject.
Passive
No. Daily can be: 1. an adjective -- The daily wage is $25.00. 2. a noun -- He reads the dailies every morning. (here daily means news paper). 3. an adverb -- He used to phone daily.
In the example sentence, the word 'daily' is functions as an adverb, modifying the verb 'pack'.Example sentence for the adjective 'daily':You pack your own daily lunch. (describes the noun 'lunch')
A verb phrase is made up of a verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.Examples:Jack runs. (the verb is 'runs', the subject is 'Jack')My brother Jack runs. (the verb is 'runs', the subject is the noun phrase 'my brother Jack')Jack runs daily. (the verb phrase is the verb 'runs' and the adverb 'daily')Jack runs to school. (the verb phrase is the verb 'runs' and the prepositional phrase 'to school')Jack runs the print shop. (the verb phrase is the verb 'runs' and the direct object 'the print shop', a noun phrase)Jack runs everything in the print shop. (the verb phrase is the verb 'runs', the direct object 'everything', and the prepositional phrase 'in the print shop', which modifies the direct object)
It can be either. If it modifies a noun like "newspaper", as in, "I get a daily newspaper." Then it's an adjective that tells what kind of "newspaper" If it modifies a verb, adjective or another adverb then it's an adverb. In the sentence, "I walk daily." The word "daily" is an adverb that tells more about the action "walk"
The word 'journal' is a noun only in most dictionaries. However, I have been hearing the word journal used as a verb quite often and it may not be long before it is accepted as a verb and listed as a verb in dictionaries. Oxford University Press Dictionary was the only one with journal listed as a verb, others are sure to follow.
Yes, it can be as in a "jogged memory," but for the most part jogged is the past tense verb to the regular verb jog- as in- She jogs daily down her street.
Noun: The jerk of the car sent the groceries everywhere. Verb: That door sticks, you have to jerk it open.
Yes, the word 'cried' is a verb, the past tense and past participle of the verb to cry. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.example use of the adjective:Her cried tears didn't solve the problem.The daily news was once delivered by cried messages in the streets.The present participle or the verb also functions as an adjective.example: The woman held her crying baby.