It can be, depends on how you are using it.
The word net is a noun. The plural noun is nets. Net can also be a verb.
No, it is not a preposition. The word let is a verb. (also a noun in net sports, or a lease in the UK).
There really isn't a Latin root word net-. The only Latin word beginning with net- that is not a borrowing from Greek is netus, the past participle of the verb neo "to spin, to weave." This is not a source for the English "net" and related words, however; these words are native developments from the Proto-Germanic verb *natjan, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ned- "to knot, twist." Latin has a similar form because it too developed from Proto-Indo-European.
The word 'goal' is a noun, a word for word for the object of a person's ambition or effort; and a word for a pair of posts linked by a crossbar and often with a net attached used in sports; a word for a thing.
Yes, it a form of the verb "to net." But it is also a plural noun.
the word were is a LINKING VERB.
The word 'be' is indeed a verb.
Yes, the word 'do' is a verb.
Verb 2. A Verb is an action word, a 'doing' word.
Yes.The word WILL is a helping verb.
The Word "carved" is not a verb.
The word "is" is a verb, a conjugation of the verb "to be."