No, the word 'defeated' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to defeat. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective (a defeatedopponent; the defeated army).
The word defeat is the nounform.
When you see 'defeated' used as a noun, as in "The defeated marched silently past the soldiers." That is actually a shortened form of, "The defeated townspeople...", or "The defeated army marched silently past the soldiers."
No, the word 'defeated' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to defeat. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:Muhammad Ali defeated George Foreman in the "Rumble in the Jungle". (verb)The defeated champion went on to make a fortune selling grills. (adjective)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: The defeated champion went on to make a fortune. He did that by selling grills. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'champion' in the second sentence)
No.
Easily is an adverb. It tells how the Cowboys defeated the Lions.
Proper noun
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; a proper noun is also any noun used as a name or a title. Examples:common noun: womanproper noun: Mariecommon noun: cityproper noun: Chicagocommon noun: building, appleproper noun: Empire State Building, The Big Applecommon abstract noun: treasureproper noun: Treasure Islandcommon abstract noun: loveproper noun: We Found Love (Rihanna)
No, the word 'defeated' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to defeat. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:Muhammad Ali defeated George Foreman in the "Rumble in the Jungle". (verb)The defeated champion went on to make a fortune selling grills. (adjective)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: The defeated champion went on to make a fortune. He did that by selling grills. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'champion' in the second sentence)
No, "defeated" is either the past tense of "defeat" ("Caesar defeated the Gauls") or its past participle ("The defeated Gauls paid tribute to Rome"). A gerund is the -ing form of a verb used as a noun, as in "Defeating the Gauls posed no problem for Caesar" (here it's the subject of the verb "posed").
The word 'surrender' is a noun (surrender, surrenders) as well as a verb (surrender, surrenders, surrendering, surrendered).The noun 'surrender' is a word for the act of giving up something to someone who has defeated you or someone in authority says you have to. Example:The contender would not settle for less than the surrender of his opponent.
Cleopatra never defeated her brother's army. It was Caesar who defeated them in the Alexandrian War.Cleopatra never defeated her brother's army. It was Caesar who defeated them in the Alexandrian War.Cleopatra never defeated her brother's army. It was Caesar who defeated them in the Alexandrian War.Cleopatra never defeated her brother's army. It was Caesar who defeated them in the Alexandrian War.Cleopatra never defeated her brother's army. It was Caesar who defeated them in the Alexandrian War.Cleopatra never defeated her brother's army. It was Caesar who defeated them in the Alexandrian War.Cleopatra never defeated her brother's army. It was Caesar who defeated them in the Alexandrian War.Cleopatra never defeated her brother's army. It was Caesar who defeated them in the Alexandrian War.Cleopatra never defeated her brother's army. It was Caesar who defeated them in the Alexandrian War.
There is no adjective form for the noun 'caput', a word for a head-like protuberance on something. You may have been thinking of the adjective 'kaput', a word that describes a noun as finished, defeated, destroyed, unable to function. Example sentence: Our whole plan is kaput.
I think you mean "Diktat" not Ditkat if so Diktat is a noun and means: # A harsh, unilaterally imposed settlement with a defeated party. # An authoritative or dogmatic statement or decree.
They were defeated in Senlac Hill They were defeated in Senlac Hill
They were defeated in battle.
because they were defeated. they lost.
Hades has not been defeated.
If the helots defeated the Spartans, the Spartans, being defeated, could not do anything to them.
Cleopatra lost her power by being defeated by Octavian.Cleopatra lost her power by being defeated by Octavian.Cleopatra lost her power by being defeated by Octavian.Cleopatra lost her power by being defeated by Octavian.Cleopatra lost her power by being defeated by Octavian.Cleopatra lost her power by being defeated by Octavian.Cleopatra lost her power by being defeated by Octavian.Cleopatra lost her power by being defeated by Octavian.Cleopatra lost her power by being defeated by Octavian.