'Shot' is the past tense of the verb 'shoot', so yes, shot is a verb, but just in the past tense form.
The word 'shot' is a noun (shot, shots), and the past tense, past participle of the verb to shoot (shoots, shooting, shot). The past participle, shot, also serves as an adjective.
The word 'shot' in the clause 'he was shot' is a passive verb.
Yes, it can be, rarely (shot silk, shot nerves). The word shot is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to shoot."
shot
extraordinarily shocking
noun: Schuss verb: schoss geschossen
When he shoots the ball into the basket then Joe got shot in the head by the ball.
It can be (rejected applications, rejected shot). It is the past participle of the verb (to reject), and may also be a verb form or participial.
no it's a noun but if it is carry it's a verb
It is unknown what you are referring to. Are you asking which statement is grammatically correct?John got shot ORJohn was shot?Think about it. Was is a verb and the sentence 'John was shot' is much more grammatically correct than 'John got shot' which sounds informal and can have multiple meanings.
Active writing has the form subject +verb+object. eg The colonel shot the deserter We are told who did the action (shoot). The opposite to this is passive writing which has the form object + verb. eg The deserter was shot. We don't know who did the action shoot. This applies to army writing or any kind of writing, active writing would always tell you who did the action of the verb
It can be either. The adjective concerned comes from the past participle form of the verb (to concern). Many such past participles form passive adverbs (e.g. shot, known, stolen).