"Weak" can be both an adjective and a verb, depending on the context. As an adjective, it describes something lacking strength or intensity. As a verb, it typically refers to the action of becoming weak or losing strength.
Weak is a Adjective.
The verb form of "weak" is "weaken."
Replace the verb with is, am, are, was, or were - if the sentence still makes sense, then it is a linking verb, if not it is an action verb Example: Anne grew weak. Anne grew lettuce. | | | | Anne is weak. Anne is lettuce. Makes sense; linking verb. Doesn't make sense; action verb Hope I helped ^_^
No, "wither" is not a prepositionβit is a verb. It means to become dry, shriveled, or weak, usually due to a lack of water or sunlight.
Such verbs in English as called weak verbs. Those that form the past tense by changing a vowel (or vowels) in the root word are called strong verbs.On that view, examples of weak verbs are walk/walked; open/opened; spill/spilled. Examples of strong verbs are run/ran; think/thought; seek/sought. Some verbs have both forms currently in use. An example is dive/dived-dove. The issue of strong versus weak verbs is a bit more detailed than that. For more information about strong and weak verbs, see www.bartleby.com/68/73/5773.html Some grammarians call weak verbs "regular," strong verbs "irregular." Other grammarians reserve he terms "regular" and "irregular" for another system of verb classification. The strong-weak contrast is the basis of an old story of an Arkansas farmer who said, "I knew he knowed me when I seed he shuv his hand outen the winduh and wuv at me."
Posse is a noun. Only verbs have past tenses. If by chance you meant "possess", it's a weak verb and its past tense is "possessed".
To weaken is a verb related to the word weak.
No... that is called a weak verb.
Weak is not a verb, so it has no past tense. "Weaken" is the related verb, and its past tense is weakened.
A weak verb is a word that does not describe much.Example:The cat is in the house. (weak)The cat dwells in the house. (strong)
a weak verb is a verb that is regular. It follows normal, predictable patterns in all tenses. An example of a weak verb is sagen or hören.Weak verbs are opposite of strong verbs, which have stem changes in some tenses. For example, the verb sprechen:In the present singular form, it changes to spricht. in the simple past, sprach. with past participle, gesprochen.
No... that is called a weak verb.
It takes a plural verb. example, His mathematics are weak.
Weak is an adjective. Only verbs have tenses. Weaken, however, is a verb. Its past tense is weakened.
weak verb;run stronger verb;dash adverb;running
Replace the verb with is, am, are, was, or were - if the sentence still makes sense, then it is a linking verb, if not it is an action verb Example: Anne grew weak. Anne grew lettuce. | | | | Anne is weak. Anne is lettuce. Makes sense; linking verb. Doesn't make sense; action verb Hope I helped ^_^
I do not think that fall is a particularly weak verb, but in some cases tumble might be more evocative.
The word "weak" means not strong, or poor (as in ability). The homophone "week" is a period of seven days. The letters in weak can also spell the word wake, which has several meanings as a noun and verb.