No,
Miles, the plural of mile, 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).
A verb is a word that is an action. For example: I run 3 miles a day
A verb is an action, therefore fly or run would be the verb.
A verb, such as walk or run, to give you sentences like:He walked three miles to the beach.He ran three miles to the beach.
As a noun: miles voluntariusAs a verb: me offero [I offer myself/volunteer]
Yes, the word 'orbit' is both a noun (orbit, orbits) and a verb (orbit, orbits, orbiting, orbited).Examples:How many miles is the Earth's orbit around the Sun? (noun)The Earth travels 584 million miles to orbit the Sun. (verb)
"To run" is a verb. Ex: John runs 5 miles every morning.
This one can seem tricky because "What is the average" is normally how it would come out, but since average is an adjective describing something, we have to move to the next word, Miles. This is plural and the question is asking about the miles, so the correct sentence is: What are the average miles driven per month? The best way to know for sure, just take out the adjective: What are the miles...
A transitive verb denotes an occurrence of a verb when it requires a direct object.The use of carried in the question is as a transitive. Without the direct object (in this case 'her') the sentence does not make sense.Carry can be used as an intransitive verb as well in the sense of:(of a sound) to reach or be transmitted,e.g The cries of the eagle carried for miles; to have (very limited range) e.g. someone with a (concealed) gun is said to be carrying.
The word 'piped' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to pipe. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:Natural gas is often piped for many miles to an end user. (verb)The piped gas is a less expensive than gas delivered by truck. (adjective)
Miles later, the hikers emerged.... The word "hikers" is the subject, and the verb follows it.
Some examples of regular verbs in a sentence are: "She walks to school every day." "I baked cookies for the party." "They watched a movie last night."
Yes, the verb 'shake' is an action verb, a word for an action.Example: I'd like to shake your hand.The word 'shake' is also a noun.Example: The shake was felt hundreds of miles from the epicenter.Verb: shake, shakes, shaking, shaken, shook.Noun: shake, shakes.