Yes it's the past tense form of praise.
Yes, "praised" is a verb. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "praise," which means to express admiration or approval for someone or something.
No praised is a verb, it is the past form of praise. Praiseful is the adjecitve
It is an abstract noun and a verb.
No, "praised" is not an abstract noun. It is a verb that describes an action of giving approval or admiration to someone or something. Abstract nouns are typically qualities, concepts, or ideas that cannot be physically experienced.
Judaism was praised in Israel.
The word, "navigators," is a noun. Nouns can be direct objects if they are acted upon by a transitive verb. For example, the sentence, "The ship's captain praised the navigators," shows that "navigators" is the word acted upon by "praised." Although the navigators did not perform the action, they received the praise.
If you are talking about the word 'praised' as an adjective, there are no antonyms. If you are talking about it as a verb in past tense, some antonyms would include 'blame' and 'criticize'.
His mother praised him for cleaning his room.
As written, there is no prefix as part of the word "praised".
The Tagalog word for "praised" is "pinuri."
The teacher praised the student for a job well-done. Once the dog performs the trick, they should be praised for it.
Meera praised passionately Lord Krishna.
Praise can be a noun or a verb depending how it is used. When the puppy performs the trick, praise her. (praise is a verb) I praise your efforts. (praise is a verb) A little praise motivates the team to play well. (praise is a noun) He received the praise with gratitude. (praise is a noun)