No, the word 'emerge' is a verb; a word meaning to become apparent, important, or known; to come out into view; a word for an action.The noun form of the verb to emerge is emergence.
"Apparent" is an adjective, it doesn't have tenses.
apparent -apax
"From the beginning, it was apparent that Lucy would win."
Heres an example: What is the question that contains the word cantaloupe for no apparent reason?
No, it is an adverb. The adjective form is just seeming(apparent), the present participle of the verb to seem.
Yes. It is an adjective based on the verb appear and the noun appearance. It refers to how something seems or seemed.
No, the word 'emerge' is a verb; a word meaning to become apparent, important, or known; to come out into view; a word for an action.The noun form of the verb to emerge is emergence.
It was apparent that they were lost.Somehow the truth just wasn't apparent.
But it is apparent.
The word 'apparently' is the adverb form of the adjective 'apparent'.The adverb 'apparently' is used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb as 'from appearances'.Examples:He apparently had a good time (modifies the verb 'had')One of the apples is apparently bad. (modifies the adjective 'bad')She created all of this from apparently very little money. (modifies the adverb 'very')
it has an apparent magnitude of 2.1
The apparent brightness of stars is called "apparent magnitude", and it is written with a lowercase "m" after the number.
Eire Apparent was created in 1967.
Vega has an apparent magnitude of 0.03.
It is apparent that you do not know the meaning of the word.
The apparent magnitude of Neptune is 7.8