Yes, it is the third person singular form of field.
The prime minister regularly fields questions from the press gallery.
Yes, "border" can be a verb, meaning to form or be on the border of something. For example, "The field borders the forest."
The word "field" applies to open land, and the verb "to field" applies to sports teams or activities.
verb. Depends on usage. In most instances is a verb, as in they were playing. But in the phrase such as playing field it's an adjective
The word "field" can function as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it typically refers to an area of open land or a specific domain of study or activity. As a verb, it means to catch or play a ball in sports, or to provide a response to a request or question, among other uses. Context determines its grammatical role in a sentence.
The part of speech for field depends on how the word is used.See the examples below.The coach pulled me out of the game because I didn't field the ball well.(Here, field is a verb.)The wildflowers grew in a field behind our house. (Field is a noun.)
A mob surges onto the field to greet the ballplayer.
i need an action verb to answer your question accurately but the estimate is 34 million
The word 'field' is a noun, object of the preposition 'through'.The word 'field' can also function as a verb and an adjective.
It can be. "I evened the playing field when I set the terms to our agreement." I don't see it in print that often though.
The phrase "the old man watched as the children snuck across his field" contains a transitive verb. The verb "watched" is transitive because it has a direct object, which is "the children." In this context, the action of watching is directed towards the children.
An action verb shows action.Ex. dance, sing, act, study, cook, etc.Selenia knows how to dance.* dance is the action verb...A linking verb does not show action. It links the subject of the sentence to a word in the predicate.Ex. are, were, is, am, etc.The students are going to a field trip.* are is the linking verb.
It could be, but like the verb holler, it would be colloquial and rarely seen."He ignored the hollered warnings and continued across the mine field."To holler is a colloquial verb meaning to yell or shout.