Yes, it is a verb. It means to make tight or taut.
e.g
We will tighten the ropes holding up the tent.
A wrench can tighten the nut on a bolt.
Hold is a verb and a noun. Verb: Hold on to my hand so you don't fall. Noun: I tightened my hold on the child's hand.
The verb for tight is tighten.Other verbs are tightens, tightening and tightened.Some example sentences are:"I will tighten the rope"."He tightens the knot"."I am tightening the screw"."His grip on the ball tightened".
Tight doesn't have a past tense as it's not a verb.
"He (it, one, she) stretched" is an English equivalent of the Italian word Tesero. The remote past verb in question also translates into English as "He pulled (reached, tightened)" and "(formal singular) You pulled (reached, stretched, tightened)" according to context. The pronunciation will be "TEY-zey-ro" in Italian.
The past tense of "tighten" is "tightened."
why lashing of cargoes shall be checked and tightened every day
It is torsion and tension while tightening, and pure tension when tightened
Yes it does. Most of the time, getting your braces tightened is painful yes although I don't remember it being quite as painful to get them tightened as it was when I got them put on initially.
get it tightened
frightened, brightened
to what torque must the bolts on the head of a 2000 Hyundai accent be tightened?
Because when a light bulb is tightened the stuff inside squashes then snaps, causing it to blow.