yes Delivering can be a verb or a gerund. A gerund is a verb that ends with -ing, but is used as a noun in the sentence.
No it is a noun, a plural noun.
The word "postman" is a person who works for the postal service. The postal service delivers letters that people have posted with due postage paid. Therefore the verb is the verb to "post" as in "post a letter".
The verb forms of delivery are deliver and delivers. Or Delivering and delivered. Depending on tense.Some example sentences are:"I will deliver it"."He delivers the parcel"."He is delivering the parcel"."He has delivered the parcel".
No, the word 'deliver' is a verb (deliver, delivers, delivering, delivered).The abstract noun form of the verb to deliver is delivery.
No, that is not a correct sentence. It has no subject.The term 'delivers cargoes' is a predicate made up of a verb and a direct object (the plural noun 'cargoes').The subject of the verb 'delivers' must be a third person, singular noun or pronoun; for example:That ship delivers cargoes.My brother delivers cargoes.It delivers cargoes.He delivers cargoes.
Yes. It is the third person singular form of the verb deliver. Delivers is used with he/she/it or a singular noun subject.He delivers our newspaper.The boy next door deliversnewspapers. boy = singular noun subject.
The verb forms of delivery are deliver and delivers. Or Delivering and delivered. Depending on tense.Some example sentences are:"I will deliver it"."He delivers the parcel"."He is delivering the parcel"."He has delivered the parcel".
The words are called prepositions, and create phrases that can connect an object to another noun or verb in a phrase, clause, or sentence.Example :The courier for the company delivers files in the city.(company is the object of for, modifying courier)(city is the object of in, modifying delivers)
the word were is a LINKING VERB.
Verb 2. A Verb is an action word, a 'doing' word.
The word 'be' is indeed a verb.
Yes, the word 'do' is a verb.