The word birth can be used as a verb. This is an old fashioned but not quite archaic use.
"She birthed three daughters."
yes
It can be, though "to give birth to" is more common.
'Date' is a NOUN 'Diurnal' is the Ajective 'Diurnally' is the Adverb. 'To date' is a Verb.
A verb is an action. How is not a verb, if that was what you were asking
The verb forms are access, accesses, accessing, accessed. The verb access is an action verb (a verb for an act).
The auxiliary verb can is the closest verb to the noun ability.
It can be, though "to give birth to" is more common.
birth
Birth can be either a noun or a verb, but in most indirect references, it takes on a noun connotation."The day of his birth.""The birth was problematic.""He was a musician at birth."In order for it to take on verb connotation it would have to be paired with an object."She gave birth to a child.""She birthed a child."
Birth is "nacimiento". The verb is "nacer".
"Birth and medical history" is not a sentence. There is no verb, just two nouns. So no.
"Born" can function as a past participle, which is a form of the verb "to bear" (as in to give birth to). It can be used as both an adjective (e.g., "He is a born leader") and a verb (e.g., "She was born in New York").
Fecha de Nacimiento is Spanish for "Date of Birth"Fecha = Datede = ofNacimiento = Birth (from the verb nacer, "to be born")
The word born is a noun. It can also be a verb in reference to giving birth.
The woman endured much pain while giving birth. (use this word as a verb)
'Date' is a NOUN 'Diurnal' is the Ajective 'Diurnally' is the Adverb. 'To date' is a Verb.
The word expecting can be an adjective and a verb. The adjective form describes a woman or female animal who is due to give birth. The verb form is the present participle of the verb expect.
Yes, the word 'lamb' is both a noun and a verb.The verb to lamb is a word for a sheep giving birth.The process of sheep giving birth is called lambing.Example: Our new ewe will lamb next month.