No, shirt is a noun--it names an article of clothing!
Yes, the word 'shirt' is a common noun, a word for any shirt of any kind.
The tense of the verb is wrong. Since you are talking about an event that occurred yesterday, the verb tense should be past tense. Corrected: "My friend lent me her plaid shirt yesterday" or "My friend loaned me her plaid shirt yesterday".
The past tense of "wear" with a helping verb is "was/were wearing." For example, "He was wearing a blue shirt."
Match can be used as a noun or a verb. Noun: They are a perfect match. Verb: Your shirt does not match your pants.
Yes.It is the past form of tear.he torehis shirt on the fence.
A word that describes a verb is an adverb. For example, in the sentence "He ran quickly," 'ran' is the verb and 'quickly' is the adverb describing how he ran. A word that describes a noun is an adjective. For example, in the sentence "He ran while wearing a green shirt," 'shirt' is a noun that is described by the adjective 'green.'
Linking
Embroidered is a verb (past tense of embroider) and an adjective (an embroidered shirt).
The word 'shirt' is a noun; a word for a garment worn on the upper half of the body; a word for a thing.
The adverb usually follows the verb it is modifying: The shirt was made well. You played well today.
ask accent (as in "you need to accent your t's more") avenge air (air out a wet shirt) aprehend
The noun "personality" is related to the adjective "personal."The closest related verb is likely "personalize" meaning to make special to an individual, e.g. to personalize a shirt by embroidering your name on it.