Ample is an adjective, not a verb. There is no related verb form. The adverb form is amply.
Example: We have ample food to see us through the winter.(ample = sufficient, plentiful)
A verb for is to amplify.
A museum has an ample number of artifacts from history.
Corroborate; is a verb - a doing word. It is something you do or don't do. "The suspect would not corroborate with the police." i.e. he wouldn't give them information, would refuse to work with them.
The word prodigy is a noun, not a verb. My son is a prodigy.
The noun abundance is the noun form of the verb "abound."
You can't degree is a noun
You would use the word 'he' after the verbs 'is' or 'was'.
Lecture can be a verb itself.. depends on how you use it.. But another word for lecture that is a verb would be preach
Verb: "Please egg the pan before adding the pancake batter." Noun: "She cracked open the egg and whisked it into the mixture."
use an alive verb
It can be a verb or a noun. It depends on how you use it. If someone says "I will murder him," than it's a verb, but if I say "Did we just wittnes a murder," than the verb would be wittnes and murder would be a noun.
Likes is a linking verb. It's a linking verb because if you use the sentence "She likes to play ball,", it would be a linking verb because you can like.
The word "using" is a present participle form of the verb "use." It can function as a verb or a gerund in a sentence, depending on its role.
The word debt does not have a verb form and is a noun. You can however use the word owe which is similar and is a verb.
Simply, no, you can't use the word 'fact' as a VERB. You can use it as a noun.
Noun. The verb is 'use'.
I(subject) would go(verb) to work(object) in the morning.
The verb in this sentence is the word "is." When you use the verb "to be," you must use the correct form of it.