The past participle adjective contented has the adverb form contentedly. It means in a satisfied or comfortable manner.
No, it is an adverb. It is the adverb form of the adjective contented.
The opposite of contented may be discontented, disgruntled, or unhappy.Where the meaning is sated or satisfied, the opposite would be unsatisfied, or unfulfilled.
be contented what you have
If you are satisfied then you are contented. If you are dissatisfied then you are discontented.
* fulfilled * gratified * satiated * contented
No, it is an adverb. It is the adverb form of the adjective contented.
The past participle adjective contented has the adverb form contentedly. It means in a satisfied or comfortable manner.
The past tense of 'content' is 'contented' or 'contented'.
Contented en Spanish is: contentos.
The baby was contented by warm milk and a lullaby.
Contented can be an adjective and a verb. Adjective: Satisfied. Verb: The past tense of the verb "content".
un-satisfied dis-satisfied
The past tense of 'content' is 'contented' in British English and 'contented' or 'content' in American English.
First sentence:The man is poor and contented. has no error.poor is an adjective to the noun manand is a conjunctioncontented is adjective to the noun man (similar to content)There is no syntactic error as both poor and contented are adjective qualities for the man in the sentence.The second sentence : The man is poor contented is syntactically correct as the poor is a quality of the adjective contented to negate it to mean 'not much' contented.
We may either say we are content with, or contented by something.
You have to select one and contented. If you are not contented, you would likely cheat.
how can you make senior citizen happy,peaceful and contented