adore, appreciate, be entertained, be fond of, be pleased, cotton to, delight in, dig*, dote on*, drink in, eat up*, fancy, flip over, freak out on, get a charge out of, get a kick out of*, get high on, go, have a ball*, have a good time, have fun, like, live a little, live it up, love, luxuriate in, mind, paint the town, rejoice in, relish, revel in, savor, take joy in, thrill to
used / previously enjoyed.
having a boner
No, the word 'enjoyed' is not a noun.The word enjoyed is the past tense of the verb to enjoy (enjoys, enjoying, enjoyed).The noun forms for the verb to enjoy are enjoyment and the gerund, enjoying.Example uses:Verb: We enjoyed the concert last night.Noun: Our vacation at the mountain retreat was pure enjoyment.
The future tense is "will enjoy"
The word is spelled enjoyed, which is the past tense of enjoy.
"I really enjoyed my time with her" is the normal expression of this. The more flowery literary phrase uses "immensely" metaphorically because the word "immense" technically applies to a "size". The phrase appears rather pretentious or autocratic, but the word "immensely" would be used at the end of the sentence.
Here are those. Hugely, extremely, vastly,
happines
used / previously enjoyed.
having a boner
Example sentence - He changed his major to meteorology and enjoyed it immensely.
If it can be enjoyable the word is satisfying.
I was immensely proud of his work.
That is an immensely big crowd gathered for this carnival!
The word immensely in English can be translated to the language of Tagalog as the word “napakalaki”. The language Tagalog is more commonly referred to Filipino language.
Join, Singed on. Hope you enjoyed Cha Cha.
No, it is an adverb.