No, impatient is an adjective because it is used to describe a noun--an impatient person.
became is a state verb. Left is the action verb.
In the sentence, Dara became impatient and left the restaurant, there are two verbs, became and left. Left is the more active of the two verbs. One might argue that becoming impatient is not actually an action. Become is a state verb.
The word 'impatient' is an adjective, not a noun. The noun form is impatience, a common, uncountable, abstract noun; a word for an emotion.
The second verb - left - is transitive. 'the restaurant' is a direct object.
most impatient
The verb for impatient is "impatience."
The word impatient is not a verb, it is an adjective. Fred is an impatient man.
Impatient is not a verb at all. It is an adjective.
left became is a state verb impatient is an adjective angrily is an adverb
became is a state verb. Left is the action verb.
In the sentence, Dara became impatient and left the restaurant, there are two verbs, became and left. Left is the more active of the two verbs. One might argue that becoming impatient is not actually an action. Become is a state verb.
The word 'impatient' is an adjective, not a noun. The noun form is impatience, a common, uncountable, abstract noun; a word for an emotion.
The second verb - left - is transitive. 'the restaurant' is a direct object.
The second verb - left - is transitive. 'the restaurant' is a direct object.
The sentence "Dara grew impatient and angrily left the restaurant" is intransitive because the verb "left" does not take a direct object.
Antsy is in fact an adjective. It means very impatient. Antsy is only an adjective, not a noun or verb.
The second verb "left" in the sentence is transitive because it has a direct object, which is "the restaurant."