No. Pours is a verb. It is the present tense, third person singular form of the verb (to pour).
No it is not. The word pour is a verb.
no!
No
Cautious IS an adjective. An adjective is an action!
The word "it" is not an adjective (it is a pronoun). A word is an adjective if it modifies (defines, characterizes) a noun or pronoun. The big tent - big is an adjective He is tall - tall is an adjective This key - this (while arguably called a determiner) is a demonstrative adjective
Severe is an adjective.
Hard is an adjective.
adjective
No, it is not. It is a verb form, the present participle of the verb to pour. It can be used as an adjective (pouring rain).
verb
the boy is pouring water away the rain is pouring down
I'm assuming you want the phrase "pouring in" and not just the word "pouring." Rain is pouring in through the hole in the roof. Whenever she takes over a company, money just starts pouring in.
Zinc is an element. The "mossy" part is an adjective describing its physical form, which is small irregular granules formed by pouring molten zinc into cold water.
Yes, as in pouring a cup of tea.
That is the correct spelling of "pouring" (dispensing liquid).
The rain is not pouring down.
for a man
There is gas pouring on the engine. You have a fuel leak.
can you get pregnant by pouring sperm from a condom that was used last night in you
It would help to have some context, but the exact translation of "pouring water" is versant de l'eau.I am pouring water = Je verse de l'eau