Yes
The future tense uses the word will.
its a doing word... idiot
The word uses is a plural noun. It can also be the present tense of the verb use.
Wrapped can be used as a verb (past tense) and as an adjective. For example: "He opened the wrapped present" uses the word as an adjective. "She wrapped the box." uses the word as a verb.
The word 'are' is not a noun; not a possessive form. The word are is the plural, present tense conjugation of the verb to be.The word 'your' is the possessive adjective form of the second person pronoun 'you'.Example:John and Joan are your partners for the project. (the word 'are' is the verb; 'your partners' is the object of the verb)
No, it is not. It is the present participle of the verb to carry. It can be a verb, or adjective, or noun. A contraction is a combined word form that uses an apostrophe.
It may be:He uses a hammer to build a birdhouse. (uses = verb)A hammer has many uses. (uses = plural noun)
The word air is both a noun and a verb. Example uses: Noun: Let's take a walk and get some fresh air. Verb: We've scheduled a meeting for the employees to air their grievances.
Yes, a verb is an action word, even if the action took place in the past. He marched in the parade, for example, uses the verb marched to tell the action that heperformed.
The word "set" can have four different uses: as a verb meaning to place or lay something down, as a noun referring to a collection of items, as an adjective to describe something established or fixed, and as a verb to describe establishing something like a record or target.
The word hurry is both a noun and a verb (hurry, hurries, hurrying, hurried). Example uses: Noun: She left in a hurry. Verb: You must hurry to catch that flight.
It depends on how you use it. For example in "I'm going to back the car up" it's a verb. In other uses it can be a noun, adjective or adverb.