No the word investigate is not a noun. It is a verb. The noun form is investigation.
'Investigate' is a verb. The noun would be 'investigation.'
The noun forms for the verb to investigate are investigator, investigation, and the gerund, investigating.
The word investigate is a verb, not a noun, and has no plural.The related noun is investigation, with the plural investigations.
The word 'investigate' is a verb, meaning to systematically carry out a search or formal inquiry. Example sentence:Our experiment was an effort to investigate the manufacturer's claim.The noun forms for the verb to investigate are investigator, investigation, and the gerund investigating.A pronoun is a word that stand in place of a noun. For example: "boy" is a noun, and the pronoun that can replace it is "he." The boy went to school. He saw his friends there. Common pronouns are I, you, he, she, it, we, and they. So, the word "investigate" cannot be a pronoun. And it also cannot be a noun. A noun is a person (Joe, Maria, teacher, doctor), a place (Boston, Italy, Mount Olympus), or a thing (book, dog, telephone). The word "investigate" means to look for a reason or a cause, to try to solve a mystery. It shows action, and that means it is a verb.
Yes there is. The associated verb is to investigate, associated adjectives are investigable, investigative, investigational and investigatory, associated noun is investigator.
No, the word 'investigator' is a noun, not a verb.Example: "We called an investigator."
The word research can be a noun or a verb. The noun form refers to a piece of research. The verb form means to investigate into.
"Study" can function as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to a focused activity of learning or the area designated for learning. As a verb, it means to engage in disciplined learning or to investigate or examine something in detail. It is not typically used as an adjective.
It is not necessary to have one at all. It depends on what you want to say. The following examples are all valid sentences. I investigate often. I will investigate him. I can't investigate for you. I need to investigate over there. I must investigate before making a decision. I should investigate after nightfall. I can't investigate during the football match!
The police will investigate the crime. Holmes can investigate anything.
what does investigate mean?
I will/shall investigate