Fish can be a verb or a noun.
Verb -- I fish everyday in the river.
noun -- I catch lots of fish
Fish is not a preposition. It's a noun and a verb. Noun: The fish are biting today. Verb: Let's fish today.
Fish can be a verb as well as a noun. Verb: To try to catch a fish. Noun: A cold-blooded vertebrate animal that lives in water.
catching is a verb, fish is a noun
A fish is a noun. To fish is a verb.
In this sentence, "catching fish" is a gerund: a verb that is doing the job of a noun. "Catching fish" is the subject of the verb "is".
Will fish. The verb 'fishes' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to fish. He fishes; She fishes; It fishes. Examples of the third person, singular, future tense of the verb: He will fish; She will fish; It will fish.
Verb
Yes, the word 'fish' is a noun, a word for a thing.The word 'fish' is also a verb: fish, fishes, fishing, fished.Examples:I caught a fish on my first try. (noun)My dad taught me how to fish. (verb)
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Fished, the past tense of "to fish", to catch a fish, is a verb. Ex. "He fished with his father last week and caught a trout."
Intransitive, because it can't take a direct object. In the pond, fish abound. Fish (subject) abound (verb). The pond abounds with fish. Pond (subject) abounds (verb) with fish (prepositional phrase). But never this: The pond abounds fish. Pond (subject) abounds (verb) fish (direct object). That last construction doesn't exist.
No, it is a verb, possibly an adjective. The word fished is a form of the verb to fish.