Yes. Spectate has the forms:
spectate
spectates
spectated
spectating
The word spectators is a noun, a plural, common noun for the singular noun spectator. The verb form is spectate (spectates, spectating, spectated).
The word spectators is a noun, a plural, common noun for the singular noun spectator. The verb form is spectate (spectates, spectating, spectated).
The word spectators is a noun, a plural, common noun for the singular noun spectator. The verb form is spectate (spectates, spectating, spectated).
it depends what you mean, if you are in an online match and spectating (for example spectating as you died in search and destroy) then no however in a private match you can. the host needs to go to the game setup and the spectating option is there where you can turn it off
The correct phrase is "Did you receive." In English, when using the auxiliary verb "did," the main verb should be in its base form. Therefore, "receive" is the appropriate choice.
an adjective. it is not a noun because you cannot touch or interact with appropriate,and it is not a verb because you can not physically or mentally "appropriate"
The word appropriate has two parts of speech. It can be an adjective and a verb.
It's an adjective.
A zeugma is the act of using a word, particularly an adjective or verb, to apply to more than one noun when its sense is appropriate to only one.
which is not a verb
The phrase "is not" is a verb phrase using the verb (is) and the adverb (not).
No, the word 'usable' is an adjective to describe a noun as able or fit to be used (usable information).The verb form is to use (uses, using, used): He used his head to figure out the answer.