Yes, defeat is a verb. It's an action verb.
yes defeated is a verb
Defeat is a noun (a defeat) and a verb (to defeat).
Defeat is regular verb so the past participle is verb + -ed = defeated
If used as a noun: downfall, conquest If used as a verb: conquer, annihilate
battu, battue, from the verb 'battre', to defeat
noun = tvusah (תבוסה) verb = hevis (הביס)
That is the correct spelling of the verb "concur" meaning to agree.The similar verb is conquer which means to take over, or defeat.
Hate to say it, but this is not an actual question: there is no verb in the sentence, for starters....without a verb, this is just a phrase - an incomplete attempt at asking a question.
No, the word 'destroy' is a verb: destroy, destroys, destroying, destroyed.The verb to "destroy" means to put an end to, ruin, or damage something or defeat someone.The noun forms of the verb to destroy are: destroyer, destruction, and the gerund, destroying.
Yes because it is often used when the person either loses to someone in a game or loses a war against a nation.
No, it is a verb. It means to defeat, overcome, or seize by force. Both the present and past participles are used as adjectives: conquering and conquered.
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."
The word humble is an adjective and a verb:The adjective humble, describes a noun as 'modest; not proud or showy; of low rank or important'.The verb humble, meaning 'to completely defeat someone who seemed better orstronger than you'.