Airplane is a noun.
Yes, the verb 'ride' is a word for the act of being carried by a vehicle, airplane, or boat.
Airplane is a noun
Yes, the word plane is both a noun and a verb. In addition to an airplane, the word plane is also a tool for smoothing or shaping a wood surface; the tool is used to plane the wood. Example sentence: He planed the edge of the door.
airplane = mokulele
It depends on the context in which the word is used. If you are speaking of pieces of property then it is a plural noun. If it is used about an airplane's decent to the ground then it is a transitive verb.
This is not a question.The verb in this sentence is saved it is a past tense verb and there is only one verb so the sentence is past simple.A past simple question could be:Did the airplane pilot save everyone aboard the aircraft?Notice in a past simple question using the word did(which is the past of do) did shows us the question is past. The main verb save is in the base form of the verb not the past form.
at airport landed airplane<-------the answer is airplane
The word 'crew' is a noun (crew, crews) and a verb(crew, crews, crewing, crewed).The noun 'crew' is a word for the group of people who operate a ship, airplane, or train; a group of people who work together at a specified job; a word for a thing.The verb 'crew' is to work as a member of a group who operate a ship, airplane, or train, or as a member of a group who work together at a specified job.
The word 'aviator' is a noun, a singular, common noun; a word for a male who flies an airplane, a pilot.See the Related Link listed below for more information:
airplane = aeroplane
the word were is a LINKING VERB.
Verb 2. A Verb is an action word, a 'doing' word.