Cheering, cheerless.
Merriment without its suffix would be "merry." Merriment is a noun that refers to a state of fun and enjoyment, while merry is an adjective that describes someone as cheerful and jolly.
colorful, cheerful, thoughtful, helpful, careful, harmful, mournful, beautiful, hopful, faithful, trustful
The get well card was very cheerful. Listening to children laugh always makes me cheerful.
She walked into the room with a cheerful smile. Despite the rain, she remained cheerful throughout the picnic. The cheerful music brightened up the party atmosphere.
Both are correct, but "she is also cheerful" is more commonly used. The position of the adverb "also" can vary in a sentence, so both versions are grammatically acceptable.
cheerful lad
hi
Merriment without its suffix would be "merry." Merriment is a noun that refers to a state of fun and enjoyment, while merry is an adjective that describes someone as cheerful and jolly.
Oh, dude, the prefix of cheerful is "cheer." Like, it's the beginning part of the word that gives it some zest, you know? So, if you're feeling cheerful, just remember it all starts with that little "cheer" at the front.
The superlative of cheerful is "most cheerful."
colorful, cheerful, thoughtful, helpful, careful, harmful, mournful, beautiful, hopful, faithful, trustful
Everyone is cheerful.
more cheerful, most cheerful
Here are sentences with CHEERFUL in it:When I was at the game the people were very cheerful. :)The team was cheerful.I was cheerful after I heard we won the game!Why are people cheerful when something goes good or there way? :)
more cheerful
The abstract noun form for the adjective cheerful is cheerfulness.The word cheerful is the adjective form of the abstract noun cheer.
The noun for cheerful is "cheerfulness."