The word 'banish' is a verb (banish, banishes, banishing, banished) meaning to force to leave a country; to drive away.
Example: The new, improved Swish Sudds will banishthose nasty stains.
"Banish" can be a verb and not a noun or pronoun. It is used to describe the act of sending someone away or forcing them to leave a certain place.
No, the word 'banish' is not a noun; the word banish is a verb: banish, banishes, banishing, banished.The noun forms for the verb to banish are banisher, banishment, and the gerund, banishing.
Banish is a verb.
Can you make me examples of sentences with these orders?: 1.article-adjective-noun-verb-preposition-adjective. 2. helping verb-pronoun-verb-preposition-verb-article-noun?. 3. verb-article-noun-adverd 4.proper noun-conunction-pronounn-helping verb-verb-adverb 5. pronoun-helping verb-adverb-verb-pronoun 6. preposition-pronoun adjective-noun-pronoun-helping verb-verb-pronoun
"Is" is a verb used to indicate an action or a state of being. In this sentence, "is" is being used as a helping verb to ask a question about the existence of a noun, pronoun, or verb.
"Couldn't" is a contraction of "could not," which is a verb phrase. It is not a noun or pronoun.
As a verb Bannir The noun is bannissement
The word 'has' is not a noun or a pronoun; the word 'has' is a verb (or auxiliary verb). Examples:He has two children.She has gone to Miami.
Had is a verb; not is an adverb.
No, "I'll" is not a noun. It is a contraction of "I will," which is a pronoun (I) and a verb (will) combined.
They is not a noun or a verb. It's a plural pronoun.
"This'll" is a contraction of "this will," where "this" is a pronoun and "will" is a verb.