Yes, wiping is a verb; the present participle of the verb to wipe. The present participle of a verb is also an adjective and a verbal noun called a gerund. Example uses:
Verb: He was wiping up the spilled milk with the elbow his jacket.
Adjective: The wiping cloths are in a bucket under the sink.
Noun: Wiping is the best way to keep it clean, washing will ruin the finish.
It can be used as a verb in the correct context.
For example "Janet went to wipe the table".
It can also be a noun because it is also sometimes an object.
For example "can you pass me a baby wipe please".
Yes, it is a verb usually meaning to rub or clean a surface. This has been extended to a noun form, for a cleaning cloth (e.g. baby wipes).
Wipe is most commonly used as a verb, indicating an action. It has become common as a noun, such things as in a wet wipe.
sweep wipe scrub tidy clean
transitive verb.......to rub out, to cross out, to wipe, to erase, to ignore promominal verb....to disapear, to be wiped away verb reflexitive........to resign (from a club etc)
Walk, wash and weigh are verbs. The words wrestle, wipe and whistle are verbs.
dry (adjective) I dry/wipe dry (verb)
muku is a verb and noun. The verb means to wipe, rub, smear etc. The noun means blackboard duster, dishcloth, duster, eraser, rubber.
It can be a verb. You can say, oh no, I spilled my drink! It can also be used as a noun. You can say Please wipe up that spill, and it'll be a noun. =========================== "Spill" can be either a noun or a verb. The context in which the word is used will determine whether it is one or the other.
Yes. It is the present participle of the verb to wipe. Verbs that end in E often drop the E when adding the suffix -ing.
a wipe that is vertical
wipe whar???
A by-wipe is a secret or side stroke.
A by-wipe is a secret or side stroke.
Present tense of wiped is wipe