He followed propably with the
bonzi I think I've literally told you about 7 times now it's PROBABLY and not PROPABLY sometimes I think you're doing this out of spite......
I was going to respond to this by pointing out his use of the word "hella" right afterwards.
But in trying to do that, now I am trying to figure something english related out.
If you have a word to describe a noun, it's called an adjective. ex: (A 'busy' beaver)
If you have that word describe a verb, it's called an adverb. ex: (I am running 'energetically')
My question is this: If you have that word describe neither a noun or a verb, but it describes another adjective instead, what are you supposed to call that?
Like in the sentence "I am hella busy." what does 'hella' qualify as? Am I wrong assuming busy qualifies as an adjective in that context and is rather some kind of object participle or something?
It seems like even so, it should be easy enough to come up with an example of an adjective having a word to describe that adjective like an adverb describes a verb. (for instance, take any sentence with an adjective, and modify it so that the word right before that adjective is "really"), but is it the case that any attempt at trying to do so is always incorrect grammar? Or is there a proper way to do it and I am just ignorant of the correct term for which?