The verb form of sight is "to see."
"Hides" is a present tense verb that functions as the simple present form of the verb "hide," which means to conceal or to keep out of sight.
The verb of loathsome is loath.An example sentence is "I loath her".Another is "why do you loath me?"
The verb form of "involvement" is "involve."
The verb form of commentary is "commentate."
A verb form for the word "dignity" is "dignify."
"Hides" is a present tense verb that functions as the simple present form of the verb "hide," which means to conceal or to keep out of sight.
It can be (a sighted ship, a sighted target, a sighted person as opposed to a blind person).The word is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to sight" (to see, or aim).
the verb is can be
SIGHTED
Taste. 'See' is a verb, 'sight' is a noun. 'Taste' is a verb and also a noun.
The Latin verb conspicio means I catch sight of, observe or see. Conspexit would be the third person past perfect - so "he caught sight of, he saw".
une vue (noun) is a sight in French. Vue as a form of the verb 'voir' (to see) is translated 'seen'.
The word 'sight' is both a verb and a noun.EXAMPLESverb: I was the first to sight the rare species.noun: The Grand Canyon was quite an amazing sight.
what an incredible sight that surely is!
If used in the context of "to be invisible" it is a verb. Hide can be used as a verb for invisible, as in "to hide from sight".
If your using a non-action verb, it would be:"What a wonderful sight!"An action verb would be:"Look at that sight!"I know it doesn't look much a difference, but there is. Thesight of the mountains were magnificent.
Grimace is a noun and a verb. It just depends on how you use it. Noun form: The grimace of the refugees in the photograph reveals the pain of homelessness. Verb form: Most people grimace at the mere sound of the dentist's drill.