"declared" is the past tense of the verb "to declare".
Yes, it is a verb. It is something you are doing.
No, declared is a past tense verb.
Said can be an adjective, but is rarely used that way, It is the past participle of the verb to say.(e.g. Things said cannot be unsaid.)-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Other participles that can be used as adjectives meaning "said" are: spoken, suggested, uttered, affirmed, proffered, iterated, or confirmed.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is an adjective, the negative of the past participle (declared) of the verb to declare.
The word 'declarence' is not a word in English.There is the abstract noun declaration.There is the verb to declare (declares, declaring, declared).There are the adjectives declarable and declared.
The word "declare" can be used as both a verb and a noun. As a verb, it describes the action of stating something formally or emphatically. As a noun, it refers to an official or formal statement.
no not declared'
they declared Independence from the British
A guy declared it.
declared, but without proof to judge some one without having proof
no it was declared from Boston Massachusetts or somewhere in the 13 colonies no, i believe it was declared in Rhode Island or Pensylvania, and it was declared AGAINST England.
The word 'assertion' is a noun, a word for something declared or stated positively, often without proof; a declaration; a claim; a word for a thing.The word 'assertion' is the noun form of the verb to assert.
They've declared lots of things