yes, then it is called a verb phrase eg.
is eating - present continuous
was calling - past continuous
have seen - present perfect
has eaten - present perfect, third person
had gone - past perfect
was eaten - past passive
give up, look out, pick up = phrasal verbs - a special group of two word verbs
Nothing, mor is not a Japanese word.
mor = מור
It's the stressed syllable in a word, the one you say a bit more forcefully than the others. In the word "tomorrow", you emphasize the syllable "mor" more than the other syllables.
No but it's not a nice word.
mor-ning
far. is how it sounds. im not sure how its actually spelled. and far far is dads dad. and mor far is moms dad. and mor mor is mom's mom. etc
My friend told me it was (mor-gie)
Hils din mor
Mor zor la
The noun (a step) in Swedish is steg, whereas the verb form of this word is stiga. If you'd like to refer to your stepfamily members, you should add the prefix styv to the person's title. For example, stepmother is styv + mor and stepbrother is styv + bror. Noun (a step) - steg Verb (to step) - stiga Prefix (Stepmother, etc.) - styv-
The word immoral has three syllables. The syllables in the word are im-mor-al.
Mother is mor, moder or mamma in Swedish.