The verb form of "careless" is "carelessness."
No, "sloppily" is an adverb, not a verb. It describes how an action is done, typically in a careless or untidy manner.
Yes, the word 'dumped' is the past tense of the verb 'to dump'. Therefore, 'dumped' is a verb.
She drove home in a careless manner, weaving in and out of lanes without signaling.
There is no prefix in careless. The suffix is -less.
A context clue is information that offers direct or indirect suggestions about its meaning.The clue for the word 'sloppily' is the base word 'slop', which is a noun and a verb. The noun 'slop' is a word for some type of waste of a liquid nature. The verb 'slop' is to handle something liquid in a careless or messy way.The adjective form of the verb to slop is 'sloppy'.The adverb form of the adjective sloppy is 'sloppily'.The 'ily' ending of the word is a clue that the word is an adverb, a standard suffix for adverbs.The context that can be inferred from the clues is that the adverb is modifying another word in the sentence as done in a careless or messy way.
No, "sloppily" is an adverb, not a verb. It describes how an action is done, typically in a careless or untidy manner.
Yes, the word 'dumped' is the past tense of the verb 'to dump'. Therefore, 'dumped' is a verb.
careless = fahrlässig (legal) careless = unachtsam careless = leichtfertig careless = unbedacht careless = unbesonnen careless = leichtsinnig careless = nachlässig
most careless
careless lying means lying careless
most careless, more careless
The correct grammar can be written as such: * He was careless; thus, he failed the test. * He failed the test because he was careless. * Because he was careless, he failed the test. * Since he was careless, he failed the test. * He failed the test since he was careless. * He failed the test, for he was careless. * He was careless. He failed the test. * He failed the test. He was careless.
what kind of car is in careless whisper
careless = palaka
more careless
why are you so careless
Yes it is. It is the past tense and past participle of 'to preach.' It might also be used as an adjective (e.g. preached warnings do not always convince careless people).