We were very hopeful to begin with that we could complete the project.
I am very hopeful that you can think up your own sentence with hopeful in it
i had a hopeful day
use the word "an" in a sentence
No, "hopefully" is an adverb that expresses a feeling or desire in a hopeful manner. It is not a connective.
Yes, "is" is a connective word that is often used to join two parts of a sentence or express a relationship between them.
A sentence with hope and hopeful would not make a very good sentence; it is better to use a substitute word. Nevertheless, an example might be:I hope John calls my daughter because she is so hopeful he will ask her to the dance.
We are hopeful that we have a shelter to live in.
Anyway, I was hopeful that you would call soon.
Those shoes belong to my friend but I don't know who those shoes belong to. Connective word = but
more hopeful, most hopeful
Yes. They connect words and sentence parts of similar functions, and clauses within a sentence.
no a connective is a word that links one sentence to another for example because, however...