Yes, it is. At Clarkson university, in Potsdam, New York in front of one of the buildings on Main Street there is a bent which was presented by some group or other to Clarkson U.
The noun 'bent' is a word for an unenclosed grassland, a reedy grass; a strong inclination or interest, a bias; a transverse framework to carry lateral as well as vertical loads.
As a verb, straighten; as a noun, straightaway
As a verb, straighten; as a noun, straightaway
Yes, the noun 'elbow' is a commonnoun, a general word for a joint of the arm, or something resembling a bent arm such as a piece of pipe or a bend in a river.
As an adjective: bent, crooked; distorted, wrong. As a noun: bend, crooked object; crookedness, fraud.
Flexion (noun) = the action of bending or the condition of being bent, especially the bending of a limb or joint. "flexion of the fingers"
Yes, "crooked" is an adjective used to describe something that is not straight or bent. It is often used to describe physical objects or abstract concepts that are not aligned properly.
The possessive form of the singular noun spoon is spoon's, e.g "That spoon's handle is rather bent."The plural possessive form is spoons', e.g. "All of those spoons' handles seem to be bent."
"It is bent" "It was bent" "It will be bent"
As a noun: bend; crooked object; crookedness, fraud. As an adjective: bent, crooked; distorted, wrong. As a verb: bend, distort.
Typically, "bent" is used as an insult as in "get bent." The phrase "get bent" means "get bent over," in other words, "screw you."
No, the noun 'hook' is a common noun, a general word for a curved or bent tool used for pulling or catching; a word for something similarly curved or bent; something designed to catch people's attention; a word for an action of the arm in boxing; a word for a type of pitch in baseball; a general word for any hook of any kind.Examples of the common noun 'hook' are:The fish swallowed the entire hook.I hung my purse on a wall hook.I bumped my shoulder on the hook in the dressing room.I broke the hook on the clothes hanger.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place or thing. A proper noun is always capitalized.Examples of the proper noun 'Hook' are:Captain Hook hates Peter Pan.There was a scary incident at Sandy Hook Elementary School.My surgery was done Dr. Hook.I went fishing up at Bent Hook Lake.
The past tense of "bent" is also "bent."