Yes, afford is a verb.
The word afford is a verb.
No, it is not. It is a verb (to afford). The adjective form "affordable" has an adverb form, affordably.
Afford is a transitive verb. Without an object, this sentence makes little sense.
It is a verb when used with an object. As in - the town can afford to repair the street. As an adjective, affordable
you say you either can pay or you have sufficient money to buy or you do not. there is no verb 'to afford'
The word afford is a verb.
The verb to afford (be able to buy) can use the adjective affordable.The verb to afford (offer or grant) can use the present and past participles, affording and afforded, as adjectives.
It is neither. It is an adverb, and will modify a verb, adjective or adverb.
The verb for replacement is replace.Replaces, replacing and replaced are also verbs.Some example sentences are:"I need to replace the fan in my laptop but I cannot afford it"."He replaces the glass in the frame"."I am intent on replacing this laptop"."He was replaced by someone younger".
His recall of the circumstances was very helpful. (noun, subject of the sentence)I can recall a time that we couldn't afford this restaurant. (verb)
'Many a' is a singular expression - like 'each' or 'every single' - so it takes a singular verb: Many a man goes just a little bit crazy when he sees a car he cannot afford.