No. The word sad is an adjective.
The word 'sadness' is the noun form of the adjective 'sad'. The verb form is to sadden.
It's an adjective, not a verb. It helps modify nouns and pronouns--a sad story.
To sadden is to become sad or cause someone to become sad.
was missing is a verb phrase. It is made up of two verbs - be verb + present participle
The verb of happiness is happy. As in "to be happy".
The word 'sadness' is the noun form of the adjective 'sad'. The verb form is to sadden.
No, it is an adjective. The related verb is "to sadden" (make sad).
As a noun: He had a sad countenance As a verb: You should not have countenanced his rudeness.
It's an adjective, not a verb. It helps modify nouns and pronouns--a sad story.
To sadden is to become sad or cause someone to become sad.
was missing is a verb phrase. It is made up of two verbs - be verb + present participle
The verb of happiness is happy. As in "to be happy".
"Was" is the past tense of the verb "is".
The word especially is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb or an adjective; for example: The new building is designed especially for research and development. This novel is an especially sad tale.
A lonely verb is a verb that talks about sad things. For example, breaking your arm.
It is an adjective. It is a word that describes something. Some other adjectives are happy, sad, excited, and anxious.
Sad isn't a verb and therefore doesn't have a past tense.