'Sad' is an adjective, the adverb is 'sadly'.
sadly
No, it is not an adverb. Saddened is the past tense verb (and past participle) of the verb "to sadden" (make sad). The seldom used adverb form is saddeningly.
sadly?
melancholy is an adverb.
No, "sadly" is not a preposition. It is an adverb that is used to modify a verb, adjective, or another adverb to express sadness or regret. Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and another word in a sentence.
No, gloomy is an adjective. What a gloomy day.
A word on its own cannot be a synonym, a synonym is a word that has similar meaning to another, for example sadness has the synonym's unhappiness, depression, anguish, melancholy, distress, grief etc. Sadness will also be a synonym of these words
grief and sadness
Sadness does end, but there is always new sadness that comes into one's life. Sometimes when it seems that sadness might never end, it could actually be a chemical imbalance in a person's brain that is causing the sadness.
Happiness and joy are opposites of sadness.
sadness can be translated asTrauerTraurigkeitSchwermutBetrübnisBetrübtheitTristesse
No sadness itself does not kill people. But Sadness causes thoughts of suicide which is when sadness is deadly...
"Sadness" doesn't exist, aka it isn't a thing.... Sadness is just absence of happiness or joy.