Yes, it is a form of the verb "to swim." It is the present tense, third-person singular conjugation (he/she/it swims).
Verb
its a action verb.
The word 'swims' is both a noun (swim, swims) and a verb (swim, swims, swimming, swam, swum).Examples:The swims that I take every morning give me a lot of energy for the day. (noun)Jack swims every day in the pool at the health club. (verb)
definitely a verbtion. I invented that word because your too ignorant to not know that an action is a verb...
she swims nicely
The word like can be a verb, or a conjunction (meaning as, similar to), and more rarely a noun.It is arguably acting as a preposition in constructions such as "swims like a fish" (truncated clause like a fish swims).
Swim is a verb, and adjectives can't be used to describe verbs. Adverbs are used to modify verbs or explain how someone does something.Examples:He swims quickly.He swims slowly.He swims quite well.Swim can be a noun, as well.Examples of adjectives to describe swim as a noun:That was a fantastic swim!Let's go for a quick swim.
The simple past tense of swim is "swam". The past participle of swim is "swum".
it swims?
slither hiss rattle slide eat
Yellow spots that Swims
It swims and swims dimwits hahahahahahahahahaha