Yes, I guess it is. It works if you think about it. A verb is a doing word soo
:She was running
:I am running
:She was occupied
:I am occupied
Hope I helped ;)
verb
The adjective forms of the verb to occupy are:the present participle of the verb, occupying;The past participle of the verb, occupied;occupiable.
No, the word 'occupy' is a verb (occupy, occupies, occupying, occupied).The verb to occupy means to reside or have one's place of business in a place; to fill a space or a place; to be busy or involved with something; to take possession and control of by force.The noun forms for the verb to occupy are occupier, occupant, occupation, and the gerund, occupying.
"Occupy" is primarily a verb, meaning to take up space or reside in a location. It can also be used in a noun form, such as "occupation," which refers to the act of occupying or the state of being occupied. However, "occupy" is not used as an adjective.
Yes, the word 'inhabit' is a verb, to live in or occupy; inhabit, inhabits, inhabiting, inhabited.
The noun forms for the verb to occupy are occupier, occupant, occupation, and the gerund, occupying.Select the two you like the best.
No, coincide is not a noun.The word 'coincide' is a verb (coincide, coincides, coinciding, coincided), a word meaning to occupy the same place in space or time; to occupy the same positions on a scale; to correspond; to agree.The noun forms for the verb to coincide are coincidenceand the gerund, coinciding.
Seize = verb, graspSees = verb, observesSeas = noun, the oceansCs = noun, plural of the letter C.... as in "There are two Cs in occupy".
emplear is the verb for "to employ."trabajar has a similar usage and means "to work," or even ocupar, which is "to occupy."
The word 'obsess' is a verb, meaning to occupy the mind of completely or abnormally.The adjective form is obsessive.The noun form is obsession.
Coerce is a verb. This is about the only way to make coerce occupy the position of a subject in a sentence. Or, if you wrote: Otherwise, coerce is a verb.
Empty. to make empty as in "I empty the container"Vacate, to make empty, abandontransitive verb To cease to occupy or hold; give up.transitive verb To empty of occupants or incumbents.transitive verb Law To make void or annul; countermand: as in Vacate a death sentance