Loud is an adjective describing the volume of a sound. It really has no verb form. However, the adverb form, loudly, can describe verbs. Some examples: * He sang loudly so he could be heard above the drums. * The fans roared loudly as the Americans scored another goal. * The preacher spoke loudly to inspire the congregation. * Upon hearing of his death, Mom cried loudly.
guffaw,chortle, or cackle
In the sentence "Ken clapped loudly," the adverb is "loudly." It modifies the verb "clapped" by describing how Ken performed the action, indicating the manner in which he clapped.
No, the word loud is an adjective (loud, louder, loudest), a word that describes a noun.Examples:They were playing loud music.He was a sight in that loud jacket.
No. Laughing is a verb, laughter is a noun. An example of an adverb used in a sentence would be - The announcer was laughing loudly as he fell out of his chair. Loudly is the adverb.
English-speaking and English language sentence structure is always:A noun or pronoun followed by a verb and possibly followed by an adverb and the sentence may have an object -- or prepositional phrase.I sang. (first-person pronoun as subject+verb)Sally sang. (noun+verb)Sally sang loudly. (proper noun as subject+verb+adverb)Sally and I sang loudly. (compound subject+verb+adverb)Sally and I sang the song loudly. (the song is the object)(compound subject+verb+object+adverb)Sally and I sang the song loudly by the teacher's standards. (by the teacher's standards is the prepositional phrase) (compound subject+verb+object+ adverb+prepositional phrase)TIP: It helps to diagram or "to mark" the parts of a sentence. Marking helps to understand the structure of a sentence.
NO!!!! An adverb qualifies a verb. e.g. The dog barked loudly. Verb ; barked Adverb ; loudly.
Dogs bark loudly.
There is no adjective in the sentence "The lion growled loudly." Loudly is an adverb modifying the verb growled.
Yes, for example: He spoke loudly. Spoke is the verb and loudly describes how.
"Shouted" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "shout," which means to speak loudly or forcefully.
guffaw,chortle, or cackle
guffaw,chortle, or cackle
"Shouted" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "shout", which means to speak loudly in a sharp tone.
In the sentence "Ken clapped loudly," the adverb is "loudly." It modifies the verb "clapped" by describing how Ken performed the action, indicating the manner in which he clapped.
The word "shouted" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "shout", which means to speak loudly or forcefully.
The verb laughed is past. The sentence is past simple.
No, the word loud is an adjective (loud, louder, loudest), a word that describes a noun.Examples:They were playing loud music.He was a sight in that loud jacket.