Struggling
The word struggling is the present participle of the verbto struggle. The present participle form of a verb is also an adjective, and a verbal noun called a gerund.
The word 'struggling' is a noun form, a gerund. The present participle of the verb to struggle also functions as an adjective and a verbal noun.The word 'struggle' is both a verb and a noun.
to struggle in something
From Latin "AGNUS". Used in AGNUS DEI (lamb of God) to convey the agony of Christ's suffering.
Struggling
No, it does not."Frantic" is an adjective. "Struggle" is a noun or a verb.
No, battled is not an adjective nor is it an adverb. It is a verb. One related adjective is the word "embattled" (involved in a battle or struggle).
The word struggling is the present participle of the verbto struggle. The present participle form of a verb is also an adjective, and a verbal noun called a gerund.
The word 'struggling' is a noun form, a gerund. The present participle of the verb to struggle also functions as an adjective and a verbal noun.The word 'struggle' is both a verb and a noun.
The word 'desperate' is not a verb.The word 'desperate' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (a desperate struggle, a desperatesituation, etc.)The related verb is to despair. The past tense is despaired.
No, internal conflict is not a verb. It is a noun that refers to the psychological struggle within a character in a story or in an individual.
Failure, adversity, misfortune, catastrophe, struggle, wreck, etc.
hay what did he struggle with
Our Struggle was created in 1945.
No. The word struggling is the present participle of the verb "to struggle" - it may also be used as an adjective. (The adverb form strugglingly is practically never seen.)
The word war as a verb: fight, combat, battle. The word war as a noun: battle, fights, struggle, combat, conflict. The word war as a adjective: martial, military, battle.