Yes, but not in ordinary modern English. The meaning would be "to make an item of clothing more spacious" or "to become full" (used for the phase of the Moon).
Full is normally an adjective (filled), or more rarely a noun, as the object of a preposition (e.g. paid in full).
Yes. The word describes the (total) status of a number, volume, or container.
Yes
No, it's an adverb, the adjective is full.
Yes, it is. It means whole, complete, or intact, e.g. an entire population, an entire city block, an entire day.
yes
no
Yes Known is part of the full verb - has been are auxiliaries and known is the past participle so the full verb is has been know.I think this is a passive verb phrase.
Her teeth were full of cavities.
Anger is a noun and a verb. Noun: Bob is full of anger. Verb: Insults anger Bob.
Are. The crates full of chocolate are melting.
The verb for full is fill. For example "to fill something".
This is really a combination of a verb and an adjective in both languages. In English, this is the verb "to be" plus the modifier "full". In Spanish, this is the verb "estar" and the adjective "lleno/a". So "to be full" in Spanish is "Estar lleno/a". The related Spanish verb "llenar" means "to fill".
no
***Auxiliary=Supplementary/Supporting.**Each Auxiliary Verb is followed by another Verb,known as the Main/Full Verb,in order to formQuestionsNegative statementsCompound tensePassive voice*Eg:He does not like Coffee[He=Pronoun;Does-Auxiliary Verb;Like=Full/Main Verb]-This is a negative sentence.
fill is a verb (fill in the blanks) full is a adjective (You are full of ideas)
Career can be a verb. As a verb it means to run, rush at full speed.He careered into the supermarket not stopping for anyone.
Yes Known is part of the full verb - has been are auxiliaries and known is the past participle so the full verb is has been know.I think this is a passive verb phrase.
It has a noun and a verb used appropriately, so it is a full sentence.
Video can be a verb or a noun when you video (verb) something, you make a video (noun). He videos (verb) himself in the mirror. She has a cabinet full of videos (noun).
The verb is "to improve". That's called the "full infinitive" of the verb. It can take other forms, but that's the basic one.
It is not a full sentence. It doesn't have a subject or verb. You would probably call it a prepositional phrase. They stepped into a world of unimagined complexity and beauty. ( subject = they, verb = stepped)
Her teeth were full of cavities.