Buzzed can mean a slang term for somebody who has had a little too much alcohol to drink. Another meaning for this word is in airplane flying. A plane might buzz the ground, for example, to startle somebody.
No. Buzzed is a past tense verb. It cannot modify a verb, adjective, or adverb.
No buzzed is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb buzz. eg The bee buzzed past me.Buzz can be a noun. eg I'll give you a buzz next week. Here buzz = phone call
referr
adverb
It can either refer to coal or it can refer to the vegetable cabbage.
The brazen bumblebee buzzed right by me!
Rhymes with buzzes:Fuzzes
buzzed
The past tense of the word / sound "buzz" would be "buzzed".
Onomatopoeia
Yes, "buzzed" is an example of onomatopoeia. It mimics the sound made by bees or other buzzing insects, capturing the auditory experience through the word itself. Onomatopoeia involves words that phonetically resemble the sounds they describe, and "buzzed" effectively conveys that auditory imagery.
Maverick buzzed the control tower after the exercise was over.
No. Buzzed is a past tense verb. It cannot modify a verb, adjective, or adverb.
The alarm clock buzzed persistantly, despite my attempts to turn it off.
"I heard his motions crackling the twigs of the woodpile" and "The hot dog was so hot it sizzled" are examples of onomatopoeia.
The cast of Buzzed - 2007 includes: Dale Yim as Billy
Buzzed - 2011 was released on: USA: 17 November 2011 (internet)