It can be a verb or a noun. It depends on how you use it. If someone says "I will murder him," than it's a verb, but if I say "Did we just wittnes a murder," than the verb would be wittnes and murder would be a noun.
Yes, surprisingly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb; for example: I was very nervous but the performance surprisingly wentsmoothly.
Yes, the word further can be used as a verb.For example: "I will further my education".Other verbs are furthers, furthering and furthered.
Other is not a verb so it has no tense. It is an adjective (a word that describes a noun) or pronoun (a word that takes the place of a noun). Example uses:Adjective: I saw Fran the other day.Pronoun: One car was blue the other was white.
yes the word jump is a word because a verb is an action word.
Rusty is not an adverb (a word that modifies a verb, adjective, or other adverb). Rusty is an adjective (a word that describes a noun). Example: rusty nail.
A verb is a word that is an action. For example: I run 3 miles a day
A verb is a doing word. Example: TomJUMPED over the wall in that sentence the word jumped was the verb
recycled
The word definite is an adjective; for example, I want a definite answer. It is not a verb.
The word 'has' is a verb of possession. For example 'She has three brothers and one sister.' It is also an auxiliary ('helping') verb. For example 'He has taken his savings out of the bank to buy a car.'
Purple Guy
The word dissension is a noun; the verb is dissent. Example sentence: I dissent the ruling of the committee.
Fry is already a verb. For example "to fry something" is an action and therefore a verb.
The word have is a verb (have, has, having, had) and an auxiliary (helper verb), for example 'have been', 'have studied', or 'have played'.
Enjoy is already a verb. For example "to enjoy something" is an action and therefore a verb.
The word "market" can indeed be used as a verb, for example, "to market a product".
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