Yes because it is a action (verbs are actions)
The opposite would be 'release' or 'freed'.
The word capture is a verb. It means to take control of.
Captive is not a verb so it doesn't have a past participle.Capture is a regular verb and the past participle is captured.
No. Captured is the past tense of "to capture" and can be used as an adjective. There is no adverb form, but there is one for the related verb captivate, the adverb "captivatingly" (enchantingly).
Past tense : captured (e.g "I was captured") or caught (e.g. "I was caught") Present tense : capturing (e.g "I am capturing a criminal who is attacking me") Future tense : capture (e.g "Today I am going to capture the person who stole something from my shop")
No, bag is a noun (a bag) and a verb (to bag).
The word "capture" can function as both a noun and a verb. As a verb, it means to take possession of or seize something, while as a noun, it refers to the act of capturing or the state of being captured. The context in which it is used determines its part of speech.
The word 'sack' is a noun as a word for a large strong bag of a coarsely woven material, a similar container of paper or plastic.The verb 'to sack' is to plunder a captured place or to place in a sack.The noun forms of the verb to sack are sacker and the gerund, sacking.
your mom has captured zero
Rome captured Greece!
your mom has captured zero
No, he has not been captured yet