Was and were.
ability is the noun form of the adjective able;conversation is the noun form of the verb to converse;dependence is the noun form of the verb to depend;departure is the noun form of the verb to depart;dwelling is the noun form of the verb to dwell;favorite is the noun form of the verb to favor;happiness is the noun form of the adjective happy;information is the noun form of the verb to inform;rarity is the noun form of the adjective rare;weakness is the noun form of the adjective weak;writer is the noun form of the verb to write;writing is also a noun form of the verb to write.
No, it is a verb form, the past participle of 'to write.'
No. The word to is a grammatical particle. It is used BESIDE a verb to form an infinitive, which a compound form of verb. For example: to see, to sleep, to go, to write, and so on. But the word to per se is not a verb.
The word 'writing' is a gerund, the present participle of a verb (the -ing form) 'to write' that functions as a nounin a sentence.The present participle of a verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:Your writing could be improved. (noun, subject of the sentence)The teacher was writing questions on the board. (verb)This was my grandfather's writing desk. (adjective)
A noun form for the verb to write is writer, one who writes, or the verbal noun (gerund) writing.
'Was writing' is a verb phrase that consists of the past tense of the verb 'write' (was) and the present participle form of the verb write (writing).
ability is the noun form of the adjective able;conversation is the noun form of the verb to converse;dependence is the noun form of the verb to depend;departure is the noun form of the verb to depart;dwelling is the noun form of the verb to dwell;favorite is the noun form of the verb to favor;happiness is the noun form of the adjective happy;information is the noun form of the verb to inform;rarity is the noun form of the adjective rare;weakness is the noun form of the adjective weak;writer is the noun form of the verb to write;writing is also a noun form of the verb to write.
The future perfect form of "write" is "will have written."
No, it is a verb form, the past participle of 'to write.'
The verb in the sentence is "written," which is the past participle form of the verb "write."
No. The word to is a grammatical particle. It is used BESIDE a verb to form an infinitive, which a compound form of verb. For example: to see, to sleep, to go, to write, and so on. But the word to per se is not a verb.
The word 'writing' is a gerund, the present participle of a verb (the -ing form) 'to write' that functions as a nounin a sentence.The present participle of a verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:Your writing could be improved. (noun, subject of the sentence)The teacher was writing questions on the board. (verb)This was my grandfather's writing desk. (adjective)
The past tense of "run" is "ran."
A noun form for the verb to write is writer, one who writes, or the verbal noun (gerund) writing.
"Illiteracy" is a noun that refers to the inability to read or write.
the verb (action) is write
The word write is a verb.