People are described by adjectives, not verbs.
Some verbs that describe the civil rights movement include protest, march, demonstrate, advocate, and agitate.
Yes, "unjustly" is an adverb. It is used to modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs to indicate that something is done or happening in an unfair or unjust manner.
The verb of justification is justify.Other verbs which depend on the tense are justifies, justifying and justified.
The verb for obedient is obey.Other verbs are obeys, obeying and obeyed.Some examples are:"You will obey my orders"."He obeys his master"."Obeying his commander, he shoots"."I obeyed my orders".
No, the word safe can only be used as a noun and an adjective. Only verbs have tenses.The past tense of save is saved.
The word "angry" is an adjective and so doesn't have a past tense. Only verbs have tenses.
The word "angry" is an adjective. The only words with past participles are verbs. Therefore, angry doesn't have a past participle.
Kill,suicuide,yell
Angry is an adverb which does not have a past tense. Only verbs can have past tenses. As such, the verb for angry is anger, therefore the past tense is angered. eg: The sight of her angered him greatly.
Angry is an adjective. Only verbs have past participles.Anger is the verb form, and angered is the past participle.Her annoying habits angered him.Be careful, though. Anger can be a noun, as well.My anger got the best of me.
No, "became" is a past tense verb, not a state of being verb. State of being verbs (also called linking verbs) include words like "is," "am," "are," "was," and "were." State of being verbs link the subject of a sentence to a subject complement that describes or renames it.
Normal verbs, abstract verbs, posession verbs, emotion verbs and mixed verbs
Be verbs, present tense be verbs. I am He is/she is/it is
The two kinds of verbs are linking verbs and verbs.
A physical verb is a verb that is used to describe the action of a sentance "I want you to go" Imagine saying this as a question, a joke, flirting, mocking or angry and there you have your physical verbs
Action Verbs and Helping Verbs
Verb semantic classes are then constructed from verbs, modulo exceptions, which undergo a certain number of alternations. From this classification, a set of verb semantic classes is organized. We have, for example, the classes of verbs of putting, which include Put verbs, Funnel Verbs, Verbs of putting in a specified direction, Pour verbs, Coil verbs, etc. Other sets of classes include Verbs of removing, Verbs of Carrying and Sending, Verbs of Throwing, Hold and Keep verbs, Verbs of contact by impact, Image creation verbs, Verbs of creation and transformation, Verbs with predicative complements, Verbs of perception, Verbs of desire, Verbs of communication, Verbs of social interaction, etc. As can be noticed, these classes only partially overlap with the classification adopted in WordNet. This is not surprising since the classification criteria are very different.