"cried" is the past tense form of the verb "cry". To prove it is a verb, you can use it with a subject: "I cried, you cried, they cried".
In the sentence, "'The taunts are rude and need to stop', cried Mrs. Norris": "The" is a definite article; "taunts" is a noun; "are" is a state of being verb; "rude" is an adjective used as an objective complement; "and" is a coordinating conjunction; "need" is an active verb in its present tense with a plural subject; "to stop" is an active verb in its infinitive form, functioning as a noun; "cried" is an active verb in its past tense form; and "Mrs. Norris" is a proper noun.
No, "cried" is not a noun, it is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "cry," which means to shed tears or make a loud vocal expression of emotion such as sadness or pain.
The principle parts cry are: is crying, cried, and has cried
cried- verb
No. Cried is a verb form, the past tense and past participle of the verb "to cry." It can, however, be used as an adjective (e.g. cried tears).
verb. john cried. in the sentence john is doing something
Cry is a regular verb so add -ed to the verb. Remember 'y' changes to 'i'. cry / cried /cried
Yes, the word 'cried' is a verb, the past tense and past participle of the verb to cry. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.example use of the adjective:Her cried tears didn't solve the problem.The daily news was once delivered by cried messages in the streets.The present participle or the verb also functions as an adjective.example: The woman held her crying baby.
active
a transitive verb is any verb that redirects its action onto an object. eg Lions eat. the verb eat is not transitive because it has no object Lions eat prey. the verb eat is trnasitive because it has an object - prey,
The verb is in the active voice.