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No, it is not. It is a verb, the present tense, third person singular form of the verb "to say."

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Jeramy Denesik

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3y ago

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What three parts of speech can an adverb describe?

An adverb can describe a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Think of the adverb 'really'. You can say "he really hurt his elbow" ('hurt' is a verb); "the sky is really blue today" ('blue' is an adjective); or "she came really late" ('late' is an adverb because it describes 'came'). Adverbs never describe nouns -- you can't say "I ate really potatoes" or "that's a really bike".


What is a good adverb for listen?

carefully Listen carefully to what I have to say....


Is it proper grammar to say one must play aggressive or aggressively?

It is proper grammar to say "one must play aggressively" because "aggressively" is the adverb form of the adjective "aggressive" which modifies the verb "play."


Is stated an adverb?

Yes, "stated" can be considered an adverb when used to modify a verb, adjective, or other adverb. For example, "She stated clearly her opinion." In this sentence, "stated" is modifying the verb "clearly" and acts as an adverb.


Which is correct grammar to say using correctly or correctly using?

An adverb my come before or after the verb it is describing. It is fine to say "using correctly" and to say "correctly using". One hesitation would be if you are using an adverb to describe a verb in its infinitive form. Traditionally it has been considered incorrect to use the adverb before the verb. This is called a split infinitive. So if unless you're an established author, stay away from using phrases like "to correctly use".