Remember, verbs "do" something. But adjectives "describe" something.
Large is a descriptor, an adjective.
He had a small serving of cake, but she had a large piece of their wedding cake.
The hen laid several large eggs.
The nail made a large rip in my coat.
Carried is the verb in this sentence, but it is not a mental verb. Mental verbs are verbs like care/see/think
No. If one is to say "something is getting larger", getting would be the verb, not larger. The root term large as a verb would be enlarge.No, it's a comparative adjective. Formed from the adjective large. To form comparative adjectives you add -ed to adjectives with one syllable or you use more for adjectives with two or more syllables.big - bigger, large - largerinteresting - more interesting, complicated - more complicated.Also you use than: larger than, more complicated thanTheir house is larger than ours.This test is more complicated than I thought.
yes part of the verb "to be" I am he is she is it is you are we are they are
It is a helping verb.
No, but it is a verb.
The verb of large is enlarge. As in the action "to enlarge something".
Large is an adjective, while enlarge is a verb. An adjective because it describes a noun.
Enlarge.
an adjective
Enlarge.
Throng is a noun (a large gathering) and a verb (to gather in large numbers).
The verb of large is enlarge. As in the action "to enlarge something".
No, the word "large" is not a verb. It is an adjective used to describe the size of something.
enlarge
larger
Enormous is not a verb. It is an adjective meaning very large, huge.
It's difficult to say, because large is an adjective and adjectives don't necessarily have a verb form. To be a verb it would have to be an action word. The best I can give you is "enlarge"