Yes, oscillate is a verb.
The part of speech for oscillate is verb.
Oscillation is a noun and doesn't have any tenses. Oscillate is a verb. Oscillated is the past tense and past participle of oscillate.
NO. They do not oscillate.
In noun form, this is referred to as oscillation. The verb form is to oscillate.
The swing will oscillate after Helen moves it.
Light consists of electromagnetic waves that oscillate due to the varying electric and magnetic fields associated with it. These waves oscillate perpendicular to each other and to the direction in which the light is traveling.
The word "oscillate" in everyday speech means to go back and forth, either physically or mentally. An example of a sentence using the word "oscillate" is "My new job is great, but I have to oscillate between New York and Los Angeles at least once a week. "
No, the output of monostable multivibrator does not oscillate. As it has only one stable output we do not get oscillations. We get a square wave as output.
'Oscillate' (note the spelling) derives from the Latin 'oscillare' (to swing).
bounce, duck, hop, oscillate
I hope you are not expecting any technical related sentence containing the word oscillate since you have posted the question under Science Category. However, a sentence for the word oscillate can be "the pendulum of a clock oscillates across it's mean position after every 1 second."
For a system to oscillate, it must have both inertia (resistance to change in motion) and a restoring force (a force that brings the system back to its equilibrium position after being displaced). These two properties are necessary for the system to oscillate back and forth around a stable equilibrium point.