Yes, word 'forest' is a verb (forest, forests, foresting, forested), to plant trees on or to cover an area with trees.
The most common use of the verb forest is the past participle, forested, which also functions as a adjective (a forested area).
The word 'forest' is also a noun, a word for a large area covered chiefly with trees and undergrowth.
Yes, "border" can be a verb, meaning to form or be on the border of something. For example, "The field borders the forest."
only one verb "saw"
The noun forest is a common noun, a general word for any forest anywhere.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:Forest Park, IllinoisForest Whitaker, actorForest River, Inc. (recreational vehicles)The Enchanted Forest (movie 1945)The word 'forest' is also a verb: forest, forests, foresting, forested.
The verb of conservation is conserve.other verbs are conserves, conserving and conserved.Some examples are:"We will conserve this forest"."He conserves the land"."We are conserving the whales"."We must make sure the animals are conserved".
The simple predicate is always the verb and not the verb phrase. Don't forget about linking verbs! E.i. She was walking to the park. Was walking is the simple predicate in that sentence. C'mon I am in 8th grade and I know that right away.
The noun forest is a common noun, a general word for any forest anywhere.A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:Forest Park, IllinoisForest Whitaker, actorForest River, Inc. (recreational vehicles)The Enchanted Forest (movie 1945)The word 'forest' is also a verb: forest, forests, foresting, forested.
It depends on what "stick" you mean. Stick, as in "I found a stick on the forest floor" is not a verb. Stick, as in "You should stick to the plan" is a verb. Hope I could help :)
She sat in front of the television and vegetated. (verb)~OR~The forest fire burned down every bit of vegetation in it's path. (noun)
Enchanted is a verb (past tense of enchant) and an adjective (enchanted forest).
Miles later, the hikers emerged.... The word "hikers" is the subject, and the verb follows it.
The emphatic forms of a verb are often used to give greater emphasis to the idea express by the verb. The auxiliaries do, does and did are used to give this additional emphasis. The emphatic forms are used in only two tenses, the present tense and the past tense.
The short form of telephone, a noun and verb, is spelled phone.Similar words include fawn (baby deer, or to flatter), faun (a Greek forest god), and phony (fake, insincere).