Yes it is a form of the verb "to make," But it may be used as a noun (gerund).
The progressive form of any verb is - be verb + verb-ing. egpresent progressive -- I am making lunch. My mother is making lunch. They are making lunchpast progressive -- I was making a noise. My mother was making a noise. They were making a noise.
The word making is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb make.
is making - present continuous verb phrase
is making - present continuous verb phrase
Is making is the verb. It shows what the air conditioner (subject) is doing.
Yes, organizing is a "doing" word, therefore making it a verb.
The verb for making a choice is choose (chooses, choosing, chosen).
The verb for making a choice is choose (chooses, choosing, chosen).
She is making a delicious cake for the party tonight.
no it is a noun and a verb
No, it is not an adverb. Makes is a form of the verb "to make."
Simple tense means there is only one verb in the sentence. So a verb phrase cannot be a simple tense.She makes hats. -- present simple -- one verb (makes)She is making hats -- present continuous -- two verbs (am making)