a room, set of rooms, or building where the business of a commercial or industrial organization or of a professional person is conducted: the main office of an insurance company; a doctor's office.
2.
a room assigned to a specific person or a group of persons in a commercial or industrial organization: Her office is next to mine.
3.
a business or professional organization: He went to work in an architect's office.
4.
the staff or designated part of a staff at a commercial or industrial organization: The whole office was at his wedding.
5.
a position of duty, trust, or authority, especially in the government, a corporation, a society, or the like: She was elected twice to the office of president.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/office
Yes, convey is a verb.
"Signal" is the verb.
The verb of complaint is complain. As in "to complain to someone".
The verb for cooperation is cooperate. For example "to cooperate with someone".
Company is not a verb actually it is noun.
A verb for office could be officed. Another verb would be officing.
The verbs in the sentence are "is" (a linking verb) and "coming" (the main action verb).
Is and coming are the verbs in this sentence.'is' is a present tense be verb.'coming' is the continuous for of come.You could say is coming is the verb.
Estudiar is the verb for "to study". A "study", as in a small office, is despacho
The word ensign is a noun and a verb. The noun form is a badge of office or rank. The verb form means to distinguish by a mark.
"must report at the office" is the complete predicate of the sentence. It includes the main verb "report" and the prepositional phrase "at the office."
The word search is a regular verb. Search can also be a noun as in (e.g.) the officers carried out a search on the office.
No, it is an adjective (legal, or formal), or a noun (a public authority). It is related to the noun office.
It can be used as both! As a noun, it's a person who represents something or a person of state legislature. As a verb, it means to appoint someone to a duty or an office.
A verb that has the form verb + -s is used with singular subjects egwalks talks waits jumps etc -- The doctor walks to work.Sometimes the spelling is verb + -es egwatches catches does -- The office girl catches the bus to work.
That is the correct spelling of the past tense verb or adjective "elected" (voted into office).
The word wait is a verb (wait, waits, waiting, waited), but wait is also a noun. Example sentence: The wait at the doctor's office was very long.