the crept in the house is very harmful.
The burgular slowly crept up the stairs.
Crept is a verb. It is past tense of creep.
No, the word 'crept' is a verb, the past tense of the verb to creep (creeps, creeping, crept).Example: The tiger crept silently toward its prey.The noun form of the verb to creep is the gerund, creeping.'crypt' is a noun.
Yes, it is.
Crept is a verb. It's the past tense of creep.
Softly is the adverb because its the one that describes the verb which is crept.
The lion crept up on the unsuspecting prey.
Crept is the past tense and the past participle of the verb to creep.
No, crept is the preterite (simple past tense) and past participle of the verb to creep.
I'm not sure which phrase you are asking about. This sentence has quite a few of them. Rattling and sputtering - this is a participle phrase used as an adverb the old car - this is a noun phrase that Martina had - this is a relative clause crept up the hill - this is a verb phrase, consisting of the verb "crept" and the complement "up the hill", which is a prepositional phrase
I'm not sure which phrase you are asking about. This sentence has quite a few of them. Rattling and sputtering - this is a participle phrase used as an adverb the old car - this is a noun phrase that Martina had - this is a relative clause crept up the hill - this is a verb phrase, consisting of the verb "crept" and the complement "up the hill", which is a prepositional phrase
The verb in this sentence is the word "is." When you use the verb "to be," you must use the correct form of it.