In the sentence "I inspired him" it would be used as a verb.
Yes, it is. The present participle of the verb (to inspire) it means providing inspiration.
Yes, it is often an adjective. It can be a noun when used alone to mean "inspirational song."
Yes. consider this sentence: Their speeches/books are inspirational.
The root of the English word "inspiration" is the Latin (not Greek) word spiritus, meaning "breath".
loving, caring, kind-hearted, gentle, inspirational..
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
No, it is not an adjective. Differently is an adverb.The adjective would be different.
Inspirational, enlightening, uplifting.
Yes. consider this sentence: Their speeches/books are inspirational.
Shakespearean is the proper adjective for Shakespeare. It's always capitalized because it's derived from a proper noun.
No. Exemplary (from the noun exemplar) is an adjective meaning worthy of imitation, or inspirational. There is a rarely-used adverb form, which is exemplarily.
happy, sad, cheerful, inspirational, depressing, delightful, deranged, disturbing, sombre , silly, serious and comical.
Inspire is a verb.
The root of the English word "inspiration" is the Latin (not Greek) word spiritus, meaning "breath".
He is not inspirational. He is disgusting
They Themselves arent inspirational, their actions are
Art is subjective. Therefore, inspirational art is also subjective. What is inspirational to one person may not be inspirational to another. That is the beauty of art.
She was a very inspirational woman.
This sentence is not very inspirational.