Yes, that is the correct spelling of the word earliest.
Some example sentences are:
Archaeologists recently found evidence of the earliest human settlement to date.
She is always the earliest to classes.
Earliest, it is spelled correctly.
Earliest.
The word originated in France back in 1125.
I would need to know context to be certain, but 'at the earliest'would usually be better.
The opposite of "earliest" is "latest." While "earliest" refers to the time that occurs first or at the beginning of a sequence, "latest" pertains to the most recent time or the end of a sequence.
Earliest, it is spelled correctly.
Earliest.
The word here is likely "original" (first, or earliest).
Egiptions, however you spell that. Egyptians? Haha umm but yeah they had hyroglyphs n stuff and im olmost positive that's right
It's from the French and came into England with the Norman Conquest in 1066. Early spellings spell it like the French "merci".
The word originated in France back in 1125.
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun Egypt, a country in North Africa that had one of the world's earliest civilizations. There is also the archaic spelling, based on Greek, which is Ægypt.
Earliest is an adjective.
1.Learn to spell 2.No relationships unti the 6th grade at the earliest-trust me All you're doing is setting yourself up to have your heart broken
Yes. But earliest is also an adjective, the superlative of early (most early). adjective - the earliest time adverb - he arrived earliest
Raster.
I think the earliest form is poem, because The Book of Songs is the earliest poetry anthology and the earliest literature.