All of the episodes of "The Perils of Pauline" depicted her nail-biting adventures.
Example sentence - They listened intently as he told of his adventures in the foreign land.
You should write the sentence like so: Your (or My) favorite novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, is set mostly on the Mississippi River.
"Though she was normally vivacious, her grief made her oddly silent, hardly her usual loquacious self." "The loquacious host talked for hours about his adventures in Africa."
Adventures: Aventuras
That is the correct spelling of the phrase "happy adventures."
Nailbiting
onychophagia
horrifying, frightening, creepy, nailbiting, gut-clencher, Petrifying,
use the adventures that you went on
Example sentence - They listened intently as he told of his adventures in the foreign land.
The correct way to capitalize the sentence is: "My favorite novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, is set mostly on the Mississippi River."
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen is a movie by Terry Gilliam.
You should write the sentence like so: Your (or My) favorite novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, is set mostly on the Mississippi River.
recorded
Oh, dude, the adverb in that sentence is "shyly." It's describing how Grandpa is telling people about his adventures at sea. Like, it's totally adding that extra oomph to the verb "telling." So yeah, "shyly" is the adverb in that sentence, no big deal.
The traveler journeyed from here to thither in search of new adventures.
Have you read The Adventures of Tom Sawyer? or... Have you read Mark Twain's book The Adventures of Tom Sawyer? No letter 's' after Sawyer, if that is part of the question's intent. The structure 'The Adventures of...' implies possession by what follows the word of; Sawyers or Sawyer's is redundant. You would say The Rite of Spring and not The Rite of Spring's. You would say The Queen of The United Kingdom, and not The Queen of the United Kingdom's.