Live (pronounced liv) is a verb meaning to be alive; to enjoy life.
Yes, "live" can be a verb, as in "I live in a city." It can also be an adjective, as in "a live concert."
The verb form of the word "residence" is "reside."
No, the word 'live' is not a noun.The word 'live' is a verb, an adjective, and an adverb.The noun form of the verb to live is the gerund living.A related noun form is life.
It can be an action verb or a adjective...depends on the context. The pronunciation is different between verb and adjective form. live (adj) to be alive ; LIVE as in HIVE live (v) to exist ; LIVE as in GIVE
"Sumida" in Korean means "to live" or "to be alive" in English.
No, "neighbourhood" is a noun that refers to a geographic area or community in which people live. It is not used as a verb in the English language.
The verb form of the word "residence" is "reside."
No, the word 'live' is not a noun.The word 'live' is a verb, an adjective, and an adverb.The noun form of the verb to live is the gerund living.A related noun form is life.
The word lived is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb live.
It can be an action verb or a adjective...depends on the context. The pronunciation is different between verb and adjective form. live (adj) to be alive ; LIVE as in HIVE live (v) to exist ; LIVE as in GIVE
the English verb "to live" is "vivre" in French. If you mean the descriptive word "live" (as in, 'the Olympics are being shown live') I'm not sure.
Yes, the word 'inhabit' is a verb, to live in or occupy; inhabit, inhabits, inhabiting, inhabited.
The word 'live' is not a noun. The word 'live' is a verb, an adjective, and an adverb.Examples:We will live at the beach and swim every day. (verb)Is that a plastic plant or a live plant? (adjective)We'll be broadcasting live from the arena. (adverb)The noun form of the verb to live is the gerund, living.The noun form for the adjective 'live' is liveliness.A related noun form is life.
The word reside is a verb (to live somewhere). "Her brother resides in Canada."
The word live (rhymes with give) is a verb, (live, lives, lived, living) to have life, to be alive.The word live (rhymes with five) is an adjective that describes an in person performance, having life, or full of life and energy.Example uses:My best friend and I live on the same street. (verb)A live snake crept into our tent and we ran out screaming. (adjective)
It depends on whether this is being used as a verb or an adjective. As the verb 'to live' as in a country, the word is sumu (or sumimasu in polite form). To say 'I live in Japan', it is 'watashi-wa Nihon-ni sumimasu.' (to make it 'I am living in Japan', it would change slightly, as it does in English, to 'Watashi-wa Nihon-ni sundeimasu'. For the verb 'to live' as in being alive, it is 'ikimasu'. The word ikebana, flower arranging, comes from this word. To use live as in 'a live broadcast', the word 'nama' is used, which can also mean raw. A live broadcast is 'nama hoso.'
The word 'hut' is a noun, a word for a simple, sometimes temporary dwelling; a word for a thing.Some dictionaries also use the word 'hut' as a verb, meaning to to furnish with or live in a hut.
A verb? An adjective. The word cannot be translated unless used in a sentence.The question is not clear. A verb? An adjective?