Yes, locked, the past tense of lock, is an action, therefore it is a verb.
A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
It can be: to lock is to secure or to fix in a position.
It can also be a noun for a locking device, or for a strand of hairs.
Example: We lock the car doors when we park our car.
The opposite adjective to open is closed, or shut.Similarly, the opposite verb is to close or to shut.In some uses, the opposite of open is private or restricted. For behavior, the opposite of open can be reserved. For locks, the opposite of open is locked or secured.
Yes, it is a verb, or at least a type of verb. Experienced is a linking verb.
A verb is an action word. 'He' is a pronoun. There are no verb variations for 'he'.
The verb
Got is an irregular verb. It is the past tense verb of "get".
Your sentence: Joy was locked out of the house. Joy is a girl. was locked is the verb out of the house is the clause. Out of the house means she was outside of the house, not inside. If you lock your keys inside the car, you are outside the car and locked out. If the school doors are locked and you are outside, you can't go into the school.
Yes, it is the plural form of claw
Remove the C and you have verb "lock" -- of course, you want the past participle (locked).
No, the word safe is both an adjective and a noun. Adjective: free from danger. Noun: a metal box that valuables are locked inside for safekeeping.
An infinitive is to + simple form of a verb. It often acts as a noun, adjective, or adverb. Because of this, an infinitive is never the main verb in a sentence.The dog has been locked in the house all day. She wants to run in the yard.
It depends on what way you're using the word. It can be a verb or a noun. As a verb, it means to jump over something, so an example would be: "In order to complete the obstacle course, he had to vault the fence." As a noun, it means a locked place where something is kept, like a bank vault, so a sentence would be: "The gold bars were contained in a locked vault that was difficult to open."
The word 'calmly' is none of the above, calmly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb. Examples:Mother calmly held out her hand for my cellphone, and she calmly locked it in her desk drawer. Then, speaking very calmly, she said, "Meet me here on Sunday when I will be unlocking this drawer."
"The canoe with the blue stripes" is the fragment, a noun phrase with no verb. The phrase is the subject or the object of a sentence, but it isn't a sentence. Samples of the completed sentence with the subject and the verb in bold:Subject: The canoe with the blue stripes isMr. Jones' canoe.Object of the verb: I rented the canoe with the blue stripes.Object of a preposition: I saw him in the canoe with the blue stripes.The following are complete sentences, the subject and the verb in bold:The truth can be unpleasant.The rams locked horns and the tourists watchedthem from far away.The dancer floated across the stage.
Locked Out was created in 1993-12.
you dont get locked in the museum
never it can never get locked
No, Because the locked locker is locked with the same lock on the outside, and there is only one lock, so the locked locker couldn't contain a lock if it's locked with it. Unless the locked locker is locked from the inside, then that is possible.