Some examples of nouns that are also verbs:
no
It's pretty easy to figure out... Proper nouns are capitalized. Common nouns come before the verb-- nouns are the doers, while the verb is the doing. In your sentence 'lived' is the verb. The teacher taught students.
Many English verbs can be changed into nouns. Verbs also have their Principal parts. Many nouns (countable nouns) have singular and plural forms. Anyhow, the question is not clear.
The word sixteen is an adjective. It describes how many nouns there are.
No. The verb or helper verb "has" is singular. Plural nouns (and I and you) use "have."
the nouns agree with it because it is a noun
"Changed" is a verb. It is the past tense form of the verb "change."
It changes verbs ending in -ate into nouns meaning the act of doing whatever the verb says. The verb ending -ate is replaced by -ation. A verb like nominate is changed to nomination which means the act of nominating. Or a verb like create becomes creation, the act of creating.
Abstract nouns for the verb to apply are applicabilityand the gerund, applying.Concrete nouns for the verb to apply are applier, application, and appliance.
The verb reviewed is used after both singular and plural nouns.
Yes. Calculate is a verb, calculation and calculator are nouns.
Two nouns: 'nurse' and 'patients'. Although in some other uses 'visits' can be a noun, in that sentence it is a verb.