It can be, as a form of the verb "to lie." It is the present tense, third-person singular conjugation of the verb (he or she lies).
It can also be a plural noun, meaning more than one lie.
The American falls lies within the US. Has one direct verb. Lies.
As a verb it would be "He lies when he tells the story." As a noun "He tells lies when he talks."
As a verb it would be "He lies when he tells the story." As a noun "He tells lies when he talks."
No, it is not. It is either a plural noun (one lie, two lies) or the present tense (third person singular) of the verb to lie.
The word "lies" can function as both a verb and a noun. As a verb, it is the third person singular form of the verb "to lie," meaning to recline or to intentionally deceive. As a noun, it refers to falsehoods or untruths.
Yes, there is a linking verb in the sentence "The American Falls lies within the US." The verb "lies" serves as a linking verb, connecting the subject "The American Falls" to its location "within the US." Linking verbs often describe states of being or conditions rather than actions.
I/you/we/they lie. He/she/it lies. The present participle is lying.
The complete subject of this sentence is 'An ancient village'. This is because it is 'The ancient village' that is doing the verb, 'lies'. 'Those mountains' are not doing the verb, and are not the subject of the sentence.
No. Passive voice is when the verb has [-ed] on the end. E.g. Friendship is destroyed by lies.
The word 'lie' is both a noun (lie, lies) and a verb (lie, lies, lying, lied).The noun 'lie' is a word for a falsehood.The noun forms of the verb to lie are liar and the gerund, lying.
The correct phrase is "There it lies." The verb "lie" means to be in a resting position, while "lay" requires a direct object and means to put something down. Therefore, when referring to something that is already in a position, "lies" is the appropriate choice.
The noun 'lies' is an abstract noun, the plural for of the singular noun 'lie'; a word for a falsehood, an untruth; a word for a concept.The word 'lies' is also the third person singular present of the verb to lie (lies, lying, lied, lay, lain).