It usually is, as a verb, meaning to go across (cross the street) or more rarely make a cross (cross oneself, cross swords).
However, it can mean to extend across, which is not necessarily an action (the roads cross the equator).
When used in the vernacular, it means to act against (cross someone) or betray (as in the idiom double cross).
The verb in the sentence 'he crossed the bridge' is crossed. The word 'crossed' comes from the verb 'to cross'.
Yes, a verb is an action word
Verb 2. A Verb is an action word, a 'doing' word.
Yes, to sit is a word for the action of sitting, an action verb.
The word looks is a action verb.
No. A verb is an action. I mean run is a verb because it's an action word.
The word cross is a noun. The plural form is crosses. It can also be an adjective and a verb.
Yes. A verb is an action word.
Action verb
No. verbs are action words. 'your' does not indicate any action.
The word cross is a noun. The plural form is crosses. It can also be an adjective and a verb.
Type your answer here... First of, the question should have been constructed as "Is treatment AN action verb, a linking verb or neither?" The answer is neither. The word treatment is a NOUN and not a verb. A verb is an action word. The action word for 'treatment" is TREAT.