It can be, yes. You can "bus" a table, which means to clean it off and get it ready for the next people. Or you can "bus" students to school, which has them riding to school in the noun version of bus. :)
It can be used as a verb; "The school bus pupils in." It's a word that's been "verbed".
you can't! bus is not a verb!
Bus can be both a verb and a noun.For example, a usage for the noun form would be, "My uncle drives the bus".The verb form would be, "My friends and I like to bus to the mall"
The verb phrase in the sentence is "take the bus."
what is verb ? look, out, of, bus
The verb in that phrase is the word "Take". A verb is an action, and in this phrease the action being suggested is to "take" the bus.
"The children were running to the bus stop." The verb phrase is "were running."
The word bus, when meaning a large vehicle with seats for passengers, is a noun. When meaning to travel on or by means of a bus, then a verb, as in bussed or bussing
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.The verb phrase in the sentence is "ran to the bus stop after the movie".The subject is the noun phrase "the children".Note: The preposition phrase "After the movie" modifies the verb "ran".
The noun 'bus' is used as the subject of a sentence or clause, and the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:subject of the sentence: The school bus is yellow.subject of the clause: A bus that ran a red lighthit a pole.object of the verb: Did I miss the bus?object of the preposition: I hate to be late for the bus.
The noun 'bus' is a noun; a word for a vehicle for transporting passengers, a word for a thing.The word 'bus' is also a verb: bus, buses, busing, bused.The noun form of the verb to 'bus' is the gerund, busing.
There are basically 4 positions: before the subject - Occasionally Jon missed the bus. after the auxiliary or be verb - Jon is occasionally late for the bus. Jon has occasionally missed the bus. before the main verb - Jon occasionally missed the bus. end of the clause - Jon missed the bus occasionally. It depends on the type of adverb where they go. Some such as occasionally (above) can go in all positions.
The verb "is" in "is hijacked" indicates present tense. The verb phrase "has been" is the past tense.