No. "Graze" is an adjective to describe an activity of herbivorous animals eating plants that grow close to the ground, like grass. Another definition for "graze" is to lightly touch or brush by an object, causing a slight abrasion in passing.
Grazing is the feeding activity of herbivores. Microbes are omnivores and they feed (not graze) on numerous things.
Graze.
The homophone of "graze" is "greys."
Graze is monosyllabic.
Go let the cow graze in the grass.
Bighorn sheep graze.
Here are some sentences.The horse will graze happily in that pasture.He had a bullet graze his arm.
Grazed is the past tense form of the verb "graze".Graze means to feed with grass.
Yes, donkeys often graze with horses.
it means it can graze the net
The pasttence for graze is grazed, we just add a d to it.
The word graze is both a noun (graze, grazes) as wells as a verb (grazes, grazes, grazing, grazed).The noun graze is a word for a break in the skin most often caused by a scrape or abrasion, with little or no bleeding.The verb graze is to feed on herbage or algae, etc.Sentence examples:For noun: She fell of the bike yesterday but it was just a graze.For verb: It is not allowed for animals to graze here.However, the word "grazer" is accepted as the noun of the verb to graze, as well as the gerund "grazing".
graze as in cows graze in the pasture