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The root of "dentist" comes from Latin through French. Based on its derivation, the word basically means "tooth person" or "tooth worker".
The verb 'became' is the past and past participle form of the verb become. The verb became is always a linking verb.The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object of the verb is a different form of the subject (Mary is my sister. Mary=sister); or the subject becomes the object (My feet got wet. feet->wet). For example:Matt became a dentist. (Matt = dentist)I never became a movie star. (I never = movie star)Forms of the verb to be and to seem are also always linking verbs.
The verb is 'to go' - a verb is a 'doing' word, so it can be anything involving actions (but when we describe the verb we put it in the present singular form and put the word 'to' in front of it, so it's 'to go' instead of 'going'). In this example - 'Kate is dreaming' - 'dreaming' or 'to dream' is the verb.
x-ray. The dentist x-rayed my teeth. xylophone. The musician xylophoned his way to stardom.
"sterilises" is the third person singular form of the verb, "sterilise". Example: The dentist sterilises his instruments before each use.
(Yo/usted) tenia una cita con el dentista. The verb works for both 'yo' (I) and 'usted' (you, formal) - which you do not need to say.
Grimace is a noun and a verb. It just depends on how you use it. Noun form: The grimace of the refugees in the photograph reveals the pain of homelessness. Verb form: Most people grimace at the mere sound of the dentist's drill.
A dentist in bed is a tooth dentist. This is a joke.
(verb form) "David has been to the dentist." "It has been impossible to verify his story." (noun, hyphenated) "The child star is now a has-been with no way to make a living."
The pronoun for "the dentist" in the sentence "The dentist said, 'open wide'" would be "he" or "she," depending on the gender of the dentist. If the dentist's gender is unspecified, you could use "they" as a gender-neutral option.
Dentist is a noun.
The singular possessive form of the noun dentist is dentist's.example: The dentist's waiting room was empty.