No, it is an adjective. The verb is mow and the noun would be mowing (the gerund form).
past participle is mowed or mown. mow mowed mowed/mown.
Mowed He mowed the lawn yesterday.
The verbs in the sentence are "mowed" and "after school."
Mowed I already mowed the yard.
That is the correct spelling of "mowed" (cut, trimmed) the past tense of to mow.
City parks are mowed regularly and it doesn’t have a chance to grow. Meadows aren’t usually mowed.
No
Yes.
No, the word 'and' is not a noun. The word 'and' is conjunction, a word used to join words or word groups. Examples:Frank and Fran have just arrived.Mom made eggs and toast for our breakfast.John mowed the lawn and raked the yard.
Mowed grass does not technically have a name. i looked in my SCIENCE :) book and it said mowed grass can be called nature's shreds. Answer Mowed grass in an agricultural sense is either hay or silage.
mowed lawns and delivered papers
Pruned, mowed, and clipped are the verbs.