Yes, it can be.
The main verb in the sentence "I eat fruit and vegetables a lot" is "eat." It indicates the action being performed by the subject "I" and describes the consumption of fruit and vegetables.
The verb for fresh is freshen.Freshens, freshening and freshened are also verbs."I will freshen up"."She freshened the fruit".
No, the word "fruit" is usually used as a noun, referring to the edible part of a plant that contains seeds. Occasionally, it can also be used as a slang verb meaning to produce or yield favorable results or outcomes.
It is generally a noun, but can be used as a verb when used with an object. As in to cut from the central part, to remove the core of fruit, for example
This is a passive verb phrase.passive is formed this way - be verb + past participle - be spoiltThe fruit will be spoilt if you leave them in the sun.
Ripen is a verb and this is the base form Other forms are ripen -- The fruit will ripen in May ripens -- The fruit ripens late ripened -- The fruit ripened late this year ripening -- The fruit is ripening now.
Neither, "punch" is a noun or a verb. It can be a noun referring to a drink made with fruit juices or a verb meaning to strike with a fist.
No. It is a noun (a vegetable/fruit or a ball game). It can be a verb meaning to smash or crush.
Cucumber is primarily a noun, referring to a green, edible fruit often used in salads and cooking. It does not function as a verb in standard English usage.
From hairspray residue on the mirror. It is sweet to the fruit flies. Just wash the mirror.
The question 'Quel fruit elle prefere' means What fruit does she prefer? In the word-by-word translation, the interrogative pronoun 'quel' means 'what, which'. The noun 'fruit' means 'fruit'. The personal pronoun 'elle' means 'she'. And the verb 'prefere' means '[he/she/it] prefers, favors'.
The word peeled is a regular verb. It is the past tense of the verb peel.