No, the word 'through' is not a verb.
The word 'through' is a preposition, adverb, or an adjective.
Examples:
The ball went through a window. (preposition, 'a window' is the object of the preposition)
We came through without a scratch. (adverb, modifies the verb 'came')
The through traffic must take the left lane. (adjective, describes the noun 'traffic')
When I finish this answer, I'm through. (predicate adjective, restates the subject 'I')
To test if a word is a verb, can we say the verb is 'to through'? We can say 'to throw', and say "I throw, You throw, He throws .." etc, but 'I through, You through, He throughs ..." just doesn't make sense! So through is not a verb.
Analysis of sentence containing the word through:
"The train (noun) went (verb) through (preposition) the tunnel (noun, object of the preposition)."
The verb is "wade"
No, the word 'through' is not a verb.The word 'through' is a preposition, an adverb, and an adjective.Examples:The ball went through a window. (preposition, 'a window' is the object of the preposition)We came through without a scratch. (adverb, modifies the verb 'came')Highway twenty is the through route. (adjective, describes the noun 'route')When I finish this sentence, I'm through. (predicate adjective, restates the subject 'I')
The word leaf is primarily a noun, but it can also be used as a verb, as in "to leaf through a book."
Swallow.
No, trudge is a verb. I trudged my way through the snow.
The verb is "wade"
Verb - peer. She peers through the window. They peer at the book.
Through doesn't have a past tense as it isn't a verb.
The term 'see through' can be a verb phrase, the verb 'see' modified by the adverb 'through'.Example: The door has frosted glass that you can't see through.The term 'see through' can be part of a verb phrase, the verb 'see' followed by a prepositional phrase.Example: She can't see through his lies.The term 'see-through' (with hyphen) is an adjective, used to describe a noun.Example: We bought her a see-through nightgown for her shower.
The past tense of 'follow through' is followed through.The verb phrase 'follow through' (followed through) is made up of the verb 'follow' (followed) modified by the adverb 'through'.The term 'follow through' (or follow-through) is also a compound noun, a word for the continuing of an action or task to its conclusion; a word for a thing.
The preposition "in" is typically used after the verb "manifest." For example, "The symptoms of the illness manifested in a rash."
The word 'through' is not a verb. Only verbs have tenses.The word 'through' is a preposition, an adverb, and an adjective.The word 'through' is not a verb.The word 'through' is an adverb, an adjective, and a preposition.
Show is the root of showed. I want to show you verb tenses. I showed verb tenses through example sentences. I was showing verb tenses through example sentences.
Through doesn't have a past tense as it isn't a verb.
'Through' is not a verb, so there can be no past tense.
The irregular past tense of "through" is "threw" (pronounced the same as "through").
Conjugation.