No the word whistled is not a noun. It is a past tense verb.
Nope. It could of decended from onomatopoeia (i think i spelt that right), but it's now a verb or noun.
He tried to whistle a tune, but he couldn't remember the notes.
The past tense of 'whistle' is whistled.
Sure! Here's an example: "She runs quickly." In this sentence, the verb is "runs," the pronoun is "she," and the adjective is "quickly."
Yes, "whistle" can be a verb when it refers to the act of making a high-pitched sound by blowing air through pursed lips or a small hole. For example, "She whistled a tune as she walked down the street."
he sings a lot of whistled songs
whistled
In the English language, a present-tense verb can be changed into a past-tense verb by ensuring that the verb ends with "-ed". If the verb ends with an "e", then all you need to do is add a "d" to the end. If the verb does not end with an "e", then "ed" must be added to the end of it. Since waste, smile, share and whistle end with an "e", only a "d" is needed to change them into: wasted, smiled, shared and whistled. As push, roam, want and appear do not end with an "e", then "ed" is added to change them into: pushed, roamed, wanted and appeared. To summarize: waste: wasted smile: smiled push: pushed roam: roamed want: wanted share: shared whistle: whistled appear:appeared
He whistled as he walked away
The wind whistled
what commercial