No. Technically, "annoyed" is the past participle of the verb "annoy." However, you can use "annoyed" as an adjective, such as in the sentence, "I am annoyed." The verb in this sentence is "am," which links "I" and "annoyed." Thus, "annoyed" describes "I."
The birds screeching annoyed the cat.A dog may feel annoyed if pestered.The teacher became annoyed when students kept whispering.
the french word for annoyed is Ann.
An explicit metaphor is a metaphor that is fully explained in great detail. Unlike an implicit metaphor, which the meaning has to be implied.
Embarrassment metaphor
Tagalog Translation of ANNOYED: nainis
Annoyed can be an adjective or verb. He annoyed her. (Verb) She was very annoyed. (Adjective)
No. Technically, "annoyed" is the past participle of the verb "annoy." However, you can use "annoyed" as an adjective, such as in the sentence, "I am annoyed." The verb in this sentence is "am," which links "I" and "annoyed." Thus, "annoyed" describes "I."
The birds screeching annoyed the cat.A dog may feel annoyed if pestered.The teacher became annoyed when students kept whispering.
If you "think" he might be annoyed with you... he IS!
The past participle is annoyed.
the french word for annoyed is Ann.
Yes she is very annoyed
Its a metaphor
I got annoyed by this question.
Annoyed has two syllables.
Annoyed - film - was created in 2008.