Encourage is a verb. Encouragement is a noun. Encouraging can be either a verb (he is encouraging the dog to sit) or an adjective (the signs of recovery are encouraging). That is enough encouragement. Kaiser Willy
No, boots is either a plural noun or a verb (form of the verb to boot). The noun boot may be a noun adjunct with nouns such as in boot polish and boot camp.
The word produce can be used in either way, whether noun or verb. It depends on the context surrounding the verb. For example: A noun would be in a sentence like this: "We bought fresh produce at the store." The verb bought is being incurred on the noun produce. A verb would be in a sentence like this: "The chickens produce many eggs." The verb produce is describing what the chickens do.
No. Mary is a name, a person, a thing, therefore it is a noun. If you meant marry, as in, to marry or get married, then yes it is a verb. A verb is a word that describes either an action (walk, run, etc), an occurrence (become, happen, etc) or state of being (stand, exist, etc).
Tomorrow can be used as either an adverb or a noun.Adverb = I need to work tomorrow.Noun = Tomorrow is Thursday.
A verb ; 'dash' can be either a verb or a transitive verb .
No, it is not a verb. It is either a noun or the associated adjective.
Do is always a verb either a main verb or an auxiliary verb.
Either is a conjunction that is pair with or. It follows the pattern "either ____ or ____"
The word bit is not a regular verb. It can be either a noun or a verb, and as a verb, it is an irregular form of the verb to bite.
Neither, "sure" is not a verb."sure" can be either an adjective or an adverb.
It can be either a noun or a verb, depending on how it's used.
There is no verb of 'regular'. regular is either a noun or a adjective
The word chases is a form of the verb "chase", an action verb meaning either to follow or to pursue.
No, it's a NOUN. A verb describes either and action or a state.
No a verb is an action tropic can either be used as a noun or adjective ;)
It is interchangeable in tense so it could be used as either a transitive verb or intransitive verb.