No, it is not a verb. Lions is a plural noun.
The adjectives in that sentence are young and hugeand the nouns are zebra and lions and the verb is devour and there isn't an adverb.
No. Male lions, and therefor all father lions, are, as a general rule, are considerably larger than female lions (mother lions).
Lions can't be pets. People don't have lions as pets. Lions belong in the zoo. Lions are wildcats. Only at home cats can be as pets. Lions are from the African Jungle.
A group of lions are called a PrideA group of lions is called a pride.
Lions sleep on the ground.
a transitive verb is any verb that redirects its action onto an object. eg Lions eat. the verb eat is not transitive because it has no object Lions eat prey. the verb eat is trnasitive because it has an object - prey,
No, it is not a verb. Mane is a noun, the hair on the head of certain animals (horses, lions).
a transitive verb is any verb that redirects its action onto an object. eg Lions eat. the verb eat is not transitive because it has no object Lions eat prey. the verb eat is trnasitive because it has an object - prey,
The adjectives in that sentence are young and hugeand the nouns are zebra and lions and the verb is devour and there isn't an adverb.
The word circle is a verb ("the lions circle their prey") and a verb ("he drew a circle").The closest adverb form of the word would be circularly.
Simple - sentence has a subject and a verb (Lions roar.) Compound - two simple sentences are joined together with a conjunction (Lions roar and cows moo). Complex - A complex sentence contains a clause, which is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb but does NOT express a complete thought. (I like vanilla ice cream but my family prefers chocolate)
Animated is a verb, animation is a noun. Joe animated a story about lions and tigers. The lion and tiger animation was Joe's favorite.
No. Male lions, and therefor all father lions, are, as a general rule, are considerably larger than female lions (mother lions).
The present participle of a verb is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun. Some present participle adjectives to describe the noun lion are:walkingstalkingroaringmoaninggroaningeatingsleepingrunninghuntingchasinglickingbiting
Lions can't be pets. People don't have lions as pets. Lions belong in the zoo. Lions are wildcats. Only at home cats can be as pets. Lions are from the African Jungle.
A group of lions are called a PrideA group of lions is called a pride.
Lions sleep on the ground.