grateful cant have a verb, it is a feeling not an action.
The comparative form of "grateful" is "more grateful".
(noun) I dropped my keys through the grating on the storm drain. (verb) The chef was grating cheese to sprinkle on top of the spaghetti. (adjective) The noise of the floor polisher was a grating, aggravating whine.
Hospitality shown. "We were grateful for the hospitality shown by you and your family." Unless you wanted to say, "We were grateful for the hospitality you and your family showed us."
grateful as in "I am grateful to you" = kR^itaj~no.asmigratefulness/thankfulness = kArtaj~nyam
Grateful in Hawaiian is "Mahalo."
Grateful can be a predicate adjective. Example: I am grateful. A predicate adjective follows a linking verb and describes the subject. "Am" is the linking verb, "grateful" is the predicate adjective, and "I" is the subject.
The word "grateful" meaning "expressing gratitude" is an adjective.
The word grateful comes from the archaic adjective grate, meaning thankful. In modern English, the verb for grateful would be thank.
No, that's actually a adjective, because it describes a noun. I was grateful for that gift bag.
The correct spelling of the verb is appreciate (be grateful for, or increase in value).
The correct spelling of the verb is appreciate(be grateful, or increase in value).
No. Thank is a verb. An adjective form is "thankful" (grateful).
Terrified is the past participle of the verb 'to terrify'; the past participle of the verb is also an adjective. Example:The terrified passengers were so grateful to step onto the dock.
The correct spelling is appreciate (to be grateful, or to increase in value).A similar word is appropriate (fitting, or verb meaning to allocate).
grateful.* more grateful.* most grateful.
The comparative form of "grateful" is "more grateful".
The superlative of grateful is most grateful.