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There is not an adverb in the sentence "They opened a window because the room was too hot." You could easily add an adverb though, like so: "They quickly opened a window because the room was too hot."
The adverb is too because it modifies the adjective, which is 'hot'.
The circus juggler can spin eight plates at a time.
Because the refrigerator moves heat from the inside of the fridge to the outside, dumping it into the room. On top of that, the actual machine that moves the heat also gets warm, and sheds it heat into the room too. The A/C always have to have two sides/units, to allow it to move heat from inside the room to outside the room. Basically, a room with an A/C works pretty much like a room-sized fridge. There are industrial grade fridges which work like A/C units, with a separate heat dumping unit that can be placed outside the room/building. They take a lot more plumbing to install, so you rarely find them in private homes.
Yes, you can put translucent in many different sentences. Translucent means that an object is able to be seen through, but without perfect clarity. One example sentence is: The glass blocks were translucent but made it too hard to see people.
Yes, is the hotel room too warm for you?
The past tense verb for "I think too much" is "I thought too much."
"He gradually noticed the room becoming uncomfortably warm, and wondered if his wife, or one of the kids, had set the thermostat too high."
ended
It probably connects the subject too an adjective
There is not an adverb in the sentence "They opened a window because the room was too hot." You could easily add an adverb though, like so: "They quickly opened a window because the room was too hot."
"Too" is not a verb; it is often used as an adverb to show excess or addition. An example sentence would be, "I ate too much cake at the party."
In the sentence, "He talks too much." Talks is a verb.
This room is too small for our meeting.
No, "shut" is not a linking verb in this sentence. In this case, "shut" is used as an adjective describing the state of the doors. The linking verb in this sentence is "sounds," which links the subject "CD player" to its description "too loud."
Think of it this way: every sentence has a subject and a preticate, many have direct objects too. So if this sentence were Bob looks at the dog, then what is the sentence about? Bob. What does he do? He looks. At is not an action verb, or even a helping verb. In this sentence at is a preposition describing dog. So simply- The action verb in Looks At is Looks.
I should decrease my speed I am driving too fast.