Bad words are still bads words dispite being verbs. For instance the F word is a verb.
No, "bad" is not a verb. It is an adjective used to describe or modify a noun.
NO! It's not a bad word but it's slang for "going to".
No, it is a (bad) contraction of two words "they" and "are" - "they" is a pronoun and "are" is a verb (the verb "to be"). Look in the related question below to understand why this particular contraction is bad.
The word bad is an adjective, not a verb. Some vivid words for bad are: horrendous atrocious dreadful abominable frightful deplorable horrid
Yes. But only if it is used as a verb.
No, 'stop it' is a phrasal verb. But some people consider stop it to be a swear word.
It can be either. I can reject (v) a bad answer and the answer will then be a reject (n).
The word disliked *is* an adjective. Someone is disliked when people have bad feelings toward them. The noun and verb are "dislike."
The word wince is both a noun and a verb. Example uses:As a noun: His wince made it obvious that he didn't like onion on his hamburger.As a verb: I wince when I get an injection even if it doesn't hurt.
No, it is not a verb. Nightmare is a noun (bad dream).
Yes, the word is past tense for the verb smell; and alternate for the past tense is smelt. Smelled is having detected an odor. Example sentence: The leftover soup smelled bad so I threw it out.
The word 'egregious' is an adjective, a word that descibes a noun as outstandingly bad; shocking (egregious errors).The noun form for the adjective egregious is egrediousness.