No. Use "tentativeness".
"Alright" is not a word. The correct form, not a variant, is "all right."
No, the word nonchalantly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb; for example:He nonchalantly walked right in. (describes the attitude with which he walked)The noun form is nonchalance. The adjective form in nonchalant.
it is the adverb form of when you want something done right away
The word adroit comes from the French adroit, which is a form of the phrase "a droit". This means "according to right," from the Latin word directum, which means right or justice.
The base word of "dramatic" is "drama." In linguistics, a base word is the simplest form of a word from which related words are derived. In this case, "drama" is the root word from which "dramatic" is formed by adding the suffix "-ic" to create an adjective form.
Three thousandths.
Three and four tenths.
eighty-four hundredths.
Eight and five thousandths.
Three and one tenth
"Alright" is not a word. The correct form, not a variant, is "all right."
Three and sixty-two hundredths.
Nineteen thousand and forty-two.
Sixty-five hundred-thousandths.
seven and seventy five hundredths
that would be a right angle.
The number 682 can be written in word form as "six hundred eighty-two."