It can be (to fare). But it can also be a noun.
No. Fare is an intransitive verb.
The word fared is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb fare.
The word 'fare' is a noun (fare, fares) and a verb(fare, fares, faring, fared).The noun 'fare' is a word for:the amount of money paid for public transportation;a passenger of public transportation;the food provided or available.
Yes, fare is both a verb and a noun.The verb fare (fares, faring, fared) is to get along, used for saying how well or how badly someone is or was doing. Example sentence:Our candidate did not fare well in the primary.The noun fare (fares) has three different meanings, the cost of a ticket on bus, train, plane or ship; a passenger, and food. Example sentences:There's a ten dollar fare for the ferry.The driver dropped off his last fare and headed for the garage.They serve Asian fare at this restaurant.
As a verb: I hope you fare well at your first dance class.As a noun:I paid a round trip fare for the trip.My last fare for the day chatted with me until the end of the route.The buffet served only vegetarian fare but it was all delicious.More fun with fare:Since your fare seems so much less than fair, I will see how I fare elsewhere!Fare thee well, fair maiden!The fare to enter the fair seemed to me to be unfair.
Fare Buzz is one of the leading suppliers in the Travel Industry with discounted negotiated rates for Flights, Hotels, Car Rentals and Vacation Packages. Save time and money on your business and leasure traval plans with Fare Buzz! cutt.ly/pktiUw5
Example sentences for the noun fare:Rosa Park refused to give her seat up, in part, because she had paid the same fare as the man that the driver wanted to have her seat and when she had as much right to it.The driver said 'good evening' to his last fare, then gladly headed for the bus garage.The fare at this restaurant is top of the line.Example sentences for the verb fare:How did you fare at the job interview?The funding drive didn't fare as well as last year.
The verb is to fare (to be, to get along) and the verb form is faring.The noun fairing is an aerodynamic structure on cars, planes, and other vehicles.
"I want to have sex" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Voglio fare sesso.Specifically, the verb voglio means "(I) am wanting/wishing, do want/wish, want/wish." The infinitive fare means "to do, to have." The masculine noun sessomeans "sex."The pronunciation is "VOH-lyoh FAH-reh SEHS-soh."
It is "How did you fare in the exam?"
'Posso fare' tends to refer to something that easily can be done whereas there's a bit of a challenge, and there's more energy going into the accomplishment, when 'Ce la posso fare' or 'C'è' la posso fare' comes into play.'I can do [it]' or 'I can make [it] may be English equivalents of 'Posso fare'. The verb 'posso' means '[I] am able, [I] can'. The infinitive 'fare' means 'to do, to make'. Together, they're pronounced 'POHS-soh FAH-reh'.'Ce la posso fare' may mean 'I can do it' or 'I can do it for us'. 'Ce' means 'there' or 'us', depending upon the context. The feminine object pronoun 'la' means 'it'. All together, they're pronounced 'tcheh lah POHS-soh FAH-reh'.'C'è la posso fare' means something on the order of 'It's [something that] I can do' or 'It's that I can do [it]'. The phrase 'c'è' often is translated as 'there is, there are, etc'.
"Would you like to have sex?" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Vorresti fare sesso?"Specifically, the verb vorresti means "(informal singular you) would want/wish." The infinitive fare means "to do, to make." The masculine noun sesso means "sex."The pronunciation is "vohr-REH-stee FAH-reh SEHS-soh."