Straight is commonly an adjective.
It may be used as a transative verb or a noun.
A verb is an action. How is not a verb, if that was what you were asking
The verb forms are access, accesses, accessing, accessed. The verb access is an action verb (a verb for an act).
The auxiliary verb can is the closest verb to the noun ability.
The word bit is not a regular verb. It can be either a noun or a verb, and as a verb, it is an irregular form of the verb to bite.
Yes. It's a linking verb. "You are smart." "You" is the subject. "Are" is the verb.
No, "straight" can be used as an adjective or adverb to describe something that is not crooked or bent. It is not a verb, so it does not have a past tense form.
The verb is "is", a form of the verb "to be".In the example sentence, the verb "is" is a linking verb. A linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject (This=pencil).
Direct can be an adjective, a verb and an adverb. Adjective: Without interruption/Straight. Verb: To control/To aim. Adverb: Directly.
Subject, verb, object.
No, complaining is a verb (ending in ing). It may be an adverb. It's either one. Sorry, I didn't have the answer straight!
The correct spelling of the verb is "straighten" (to make straight, to order, or to make uncurly).
The word "straight" as you wrote it does not contain a prefix. A prefix is a letter or group letters added on to the beginning of a word that has a meaning of its own. The word "straight" has no letters added to the beginning of it.
Line up outside the ship.Make sure you line these up straight.
i like chicken! :)
Geradeaus means straight on and is then coupled with the appropriate verb, e.g.Fahre geradeaus bis Du zur Ampel kommst - Drive straight on until you come to the traffic lights (informal)Fahren Sie geradeaus bis Sie zur Ampel kommen - Drive straight on until you come to the traffic lights (formal)Geradeaus gehen - to go/walk straight on
False. The correct answer is "If two independent clauses are connected by a semicolon, the dotted line goes straight from one verb to the other." (A+)
The word 'exactly' is an adverb, a word used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The word 'exactly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'exact'.Example uses of the adverb:I don't know exactly how much it costs. (the adverb modifies the verb 'know')He drew an exactly straight line. (the adverb modifies the adjective 'straight')Set the pieces exactly so, as in the diagram. (the adverb modifies the adverb 'so'; the adverbial phrase 'exactly so' modifies the verb 'set')