'Woke' is the only verb, as it involves the action of waking. Where 'cry' and 'sleep' would normally be included, in this particular sentence they are actually nouns; cry was the sound made, therefore a noun, and sleep was used as a synonym for nap (or similar).
as the past participle of the word 'blare' meaning is was a loud and sonorous noise or blast as could be made by a trumpet. To have bellowed
When I stumbled into the drums, they made a rather loud din. Stop this loud din immediately.
Adjective''loud'' while ''rang'' is an adverb
Tumult means very loud
The word 'loud' is not a noun, it is an adjective used to describe a noun as a sound that is strong or intense; a vulgarly obtrusive or flashy appearance.The noun form for the adjective loud is loudness, a concrete noun; a word for the decibel level of sound, a physical characteristic.
The verb in the sentence is "woke." It is the action that is being performed in the sentence.
The verb in the sentence is "woke." It is the action that describes someone being awakened by a loud cry.
The sound of the alarm clock was startingly loud, jolting me awake from my deep sleep.
Quacking.
"Playing."
A loud humming sound
The surround sound speakers were really loud.
No, "loud" is actually an adjective. Adverbs typically describe verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs in a sentence. If you want to describe how something is being done in a loud manner, you could use an adverb like "loudly" instead.
Yes, as they describe an action. A verb is basically A word used to describe an action, state, or occurrence, and forming the main part of the predicate of a sentence
In music, the strength of the sound (loud or soft) is called the dynamics.
This sentence uses onomatopoeia, a literary device where words sound like the noise they describe. The word "clicking" imitates the sound of the timer in this sentence.
A horn or a siren can produce a loud sound.