No. Men is a group of people, therefore it is a noun.
A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
A noun is a word that is used to describe a person (man, lady, teacher, etc), place (home, city, beach, etc) or thing (car, banana, book, etc).
The verb in the sentence is "portrayed." It indicates the action of depicting or representing the emotions of men in literature.
women
Men and women is a compound subject of the verb " complete ".
None of the men were going home. The verb were refers back to the simple subject men. Men were not men was. man was men were
Im guessing that you mean 'What does jouer mean' rather than men. Jouer is the verb 'to play' in French
Manicure is a verb and a noun. Verb: Those young men manicured my lawn. Noun: I'm going for a manicure.
Ember be verb oven no men mob omen venom
The direct object of the verb 'saw' is the pronoun it.
This phrase is a sentence fragment. The words "all men are created" appear to be part of a longer sentence, such as "all men are created equal." In this context, "created" is a verb, and the entire phrase functions as a subject-verb clause.
Right, as in the exhausted men struggled on. But it is also a verb, the past tense of the verb to exhaust to tire out, to empty eg The crops exhausted the soil
Generally, the verb nehmen [pronounced: nay-men] means "to take."
The subject in the sentnce is