Emphasis.
The noun related to the adjective 'emphatic' is emphasis.
Emphatic is not a noun, it is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example an emphatic warning, an emphatic statement.The noun form is emphasis.
Emphatic
The verb "to emphasize" has the adverb form emphasized (the past participle).The noun emphasis has the related adjective emphatic.
"Much to my dismay, when I asked her out, the reply was an emphatic refusal.""The candidate was very emphatic in his speech against animal testing.""The Miami Heat were put to an emphatic end when they were beaten by over fifty points."
The three helping verbs of emphatic would be , Shall , Will , and do
Emphatic is not a noun, it is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; for example an emphatic warning, an emphatic statement.The noun form is emphasis.
Emphatic
An emphatic noun is a noun that is used to add emphasis or intensity to a sentence. It is often used to stress a particular point or highlight the importance of a concept or idea in a sentence or conversation.
No, indeed is an adverb.
The verb "to emphasize" has the adverb form emphasized (the past participle).The noun emphasis has the related adjective emphatic.
Yes you can put emphatic in a sentence . ie : He was emphatic about the outcome of the game.
The verb for on emphatic is empathise. As in "to empathise with someone".
Emphatic Diaglott was created in 1864.
The root word of "emphatic" is "emphasia," which comes from the Greek word "emphatikos," meaning "emphatic" or "pronounced."
When he spoke, Jim was emphatic about his love of minnows.
What is Present emphatic for the word Run?
The lawyer was very emphatic when explaining the law to his client.