No, easier is not a verb. You can't easier something. Easing/Ease is a verb thoug.
it's an adjective.
Perhaps 'assist', or 'smooth'...
The hidden verb in the phrase is "facilitate." The full verb is "to facilitate," which means to make a process easier or smoother.
The verb form of "simply" is "simplify." To simplify means to make something easier to understand or do by reducing complexity or removing unnecessary elements.
Sometimes it is easier to malinger than to do what you should be doing.
It is not an adverb, as "they" does not modify the verb "are". "Are" is also an auxiliary verb, so I would say "they're" doesn't strictly qualify as a verb. Remember when dealing with contractions to separate out the words as it makes it much easier to analyse each part. "They" is a pronoun and "are" is a verb.
Is it a verb 'to slash" or a noun 'a slash'? It would be easier to translate if used in a sentence.
The correct verb is has.It's easier to recognize when you identify just the subject and the verb, "Larry has...".
The word 'change' is both a verb and a noun.The noun forms of the verb to change are changer and the gerund changing.Example uses:There has been a change in the weather.My quarter is stuck in the coin changer.Changing is easier if you are motivated.
No, it is not. It is a verb, meaning to make more simple, or easier to accomplish.
The verb form of "simple" is "simplify," which means to make something easier to understand or less complicated. In different tenses, it can appear as "simplifies" (present), "simplified" (past), and "simplifying" (present participle).
The word is "alleviate."