When used as a verb, "knock" means to rap your knuckles against something. The most common example is a door.
e.g. Go and knock on the door to see if they are home.
No, knock is a noun (a knock on the door) and a verb (to knock on the door).
knock is a verb, not a noun..
It can actually be used as both.Noun - For example: "I heard a knock at my door"Verb - To knock. For example: "I knocked on the door"
knock can be a noun - he suffered a knock and can also be a verb - you knock on my door
the verb: I forced her to obey me. the noun: I had to use a lot of force to get her to obey me.
I started to knock on the door. I will knock before I open the door.
yes it's a verb.
Yes, "knock" can function as a transitive verb when it takes a direct object, as in "She knocked the door." However, it can also be used intransitively without a direct object, as in "He knocked." The transitive usage is more common when specifying what is being knocked.
No. The word topple is a verb. It means to fall down, to knock down, or to overthrow.
The stillness was broken by a knock on the door. Don't knock it, until you've tried it!
the captain told the crew to knock off.
Felled is the past tense of fell, which means to knock or cut down.