No, the word 'swam' is not a noun.
The word 'swam' is the past tense of the verb to swim.
Examples:
I can swim the length of this pool.
I once swam the length of this pool four times in a row.
The noun forms of the verb to swim are swimmer and the gerund, swimming.
A word ending in -ing is a present participle verb or an adjective, it's also a verbal noun called a gerund. The word swimming is a verb, an adjective, and a noun. Examples:
Verb: We were swimming when the storm blew in.
Adjective: You want a swimming fish, not a floating fish.
Noun: Swimming is my favorite class at school.
The word swim is both a verb and a noun.
The noun swim is a word for an occasion when swimming took place:
The verb forms for the act are swim, swims, swimming, swam, swum:
The noun forms for the verb 'to swim' are swimmer, and the gerund, swimming.
The word 'swim' is a verb (swim, swims, swimming, swam, swum) and a noun (swim, swims).
EXAMPLES
verb: She goes to the club to swim each morning.
noun: Let's go to the park for a swim.
Swam is a verb. It's the past tense of swim.
No, it's the past tense of swim, a verb.
No. It is the past tense of the verb to swim.
yes it is.
yes
three turtles swam on the pond .Find the adjective
Any of an adverb, an adverb phrase or an adverb clause can describe a verb.Adverb: She swam smoothly.Adverb phrase: She swam through the water.Adverb clause: She swam when she saw the turtle.
John - proper noun is swimming- verb very- adverb well- adjective Well is an adverb not an adjective. An adjective describes a noun, an adverb modifies a verb or enhances another adverb. In this case well is describing how he swam and very is enhancing well.
* My father often swims in the lake. This is a correct sentence to describe my father's current habitual action. * My father often swam in the lake. This is a correct sentence to describe my father's past habitual action.
The gosling swam away from it's mother.
three turtles swam on the pond .Find the adjective
Any of an adverb, an adverb phrase or an adverb clause can describe a verb.Adverb: She swam smoothly.Adverb phrase: She swam through the water.Adverb clause: She swam when she saw the turtle.
The words three and the are both adjectives in that sentence.
Anna and she swam in the pool. It is easy to remember when you can state the sentence as: Anna swam in the pool. She swam in the pool (not: Her swam in the pool), so combined they would be Anna and she swam in the pool.
The past tense is swam. (I swam, you swam, they swam) The past participle is swum. Present perfect : he has swum Past perfect : he had swum Future perfect: he will have swum
No, "old" is not an adverb. It is an adjective that describes the age of a person or thing.
swam!!
Swam is one syllable.
SWAM is the past tense of the verb "to swim". For example, "I swam ten laps of the pool this morning".
He swam in the sea of diamonds
It can be, when it is used to mean "freely" (e.g. the bottom half was dangling free, the fish swam free). Otherwise, free is an adjective meaning independent, unattached, or at no cost.
I swam across the river yesterday.