No, it is an adverb. The combination "instead of" is a preposition.
perfect used as an adjective instead of a verb
Swell Cool lovely
Uprooted is a verb, so it would be described with an adverb instead of an adjective. Some adverbs that could be used are recently, completely, or partially.
An adjective can modify a pronoun; for example:Silly me, I poured the juice in my coffee instead of the creamer.
The adjective in the sentence "The Fosters had a goodtime when they took a train to Chicago" is 'good'. 'Good' is the adjective as it describes the noun 'time'. For another example of an adjective in this case, we can use 'bad' instead of good: "The Fosters had a bad time when they took a train to Chicago."
perfect used as an adjective instead of a verb
Wooded.
I don't believe that you can. Endurance is a noun, but enduring is an adjective. You can use enduring instead.
terrifying is not a verb.... it is an adjective. to terrify someone is a verb and that is used instead of the adjective. happy to help
It can be, but it may be called a 'determiner' instead. It can be used as a pronoun.
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To change "France" from a proper adjective to a proper noun, you can refer to France as a specific place, country, or entity instead of using it to describe something. For example, instead of saying "French culture," you can say "France's culture," making "France" the proper noun.
Uprooted is a verb, so it would be described with an adverb instead of an adjective. Some adverbs that could be used are recently, completely, or partially.
No, the word "Italian" is not an adverb in English since it is not used to supplement the description of an adjective or verb. It instead will be classified as an adjective or noun according to context.
The word doesn't really exist ... Instead, one uses holocaust as an adjective.
An adjective can modify a pronoun; for example:Silly me, I poured the juice in my coffee instead of the creamer.
There is no exact adverb that means "in fear" or "with fear" created from the adjective afraid.The adverb form that might be used instead is "fearfully" (from adjective fearful).