Good.
Deserving can be a verb, an adjective and a noun. Verb: The present participle of the verb 'deserve'. Adjective: Worthy of reward. Noun: Merit.
"Rewarded" is a past participle verb that can also function as an adjective, describing something or someone that has received a reward.
The antecedent of the possessive adjective 'her' is the noun mom.There are two pronouns in the sentence: her and its.The pronouns 'her' and 'its' are possessive adjectives. A possessive adjective is a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something.The possessive adjective 'her' describes the noun phrase 'favorite thought' (belonging to mom).The possessive adjective 'its' describes the noun phrase 'own reward' (belonging to friendship).
Altruistic meets that description. An altruistic person is generous without expecting reward.
Rewarding is the present participle of the verb reward;the present participle of a verb can also be an adjective and a verbal noun called a gerund (often known as an -ing word).Example:Rewarding laziness is not my policy.The word reward is also a noun form.
An extrinsic reward is a reward that is external and tangible. It is a reward that is visible to others like food.
it can be. to reward someone...or to get a reward...it is a noun and a verb
There was no reward. The builders were not slaves, but there wasn't much reward. The most reward would be food. :)
No, it is not. Trophy is a noun (an award, reward, or honor; or a relic of some achievement, such as trophy skins and stuffed wild animals). It is, however, used as a noun adjunct in terms such as trophy room.
Reward
If you do your chores, you will get a reward.
The past tense of reward is rewarded.