No. Concentration is a noun (used as a noun adjunct in 'concentration camp'). The past particple of the verb, concentrated, is used as an adjective.
No but the word concentrated is
No. One is a verb, the other is an adjective.
1. definition: stronger, denser example: concentrate orange juice antonym: dilute 2. definition: focus example: concentrate on your lesson antonym: divert
To concentrate?
concentrate
Yes concentrate is a verb because it implies you are doing something but it is also not used as a verb such as in this sentence.
No. One is a verb, the other is an adjective.
The adjective form is concentrative, more concentrative, most concentrative; another adjective form is the past participle of the verb to concentrate, concentrated.
Dyslexic is the adjective form of dyslexia, a learning disorder which makes it hard to concentrate on objects on a page.
1 noun, to study very hard in school. 2 verb, you have to get up and 3 adjective, you have to get off the bed.
concentrate on
He finds it hard to concentrate in class.I will concentrate on my work.This orange juice is from concentrate.
I Concentrate on You was created in 1940.
How can you concentrate in a noisy classroom?
It is usually an adjective I think
There are several words this could be:(verbs)contends - struggles, competescondense - to concentrate, thicken, or summarize(plural nouns)contents - enclosures, inclusionscontinents - large landmasses(adjective)content - satisfied
yes because it helps you to concentrate when your in the rocket you may crash so it will help you concentrate.
The length of time a person can concentrate varies from person to person. On average, a person can concentrate for several hours at a time.