Some examples are:
ewan gago k ba sarap na mamatay paalam na april
kept
kiting
In English,strong, or irregular verbs form their past tenses by means of ablaut, that is a change in the stem vowel. They are among the oldest and commonest of English verbs. For example take:took; come:came; see:saw; write:wrote, and so on. The verbs to go and to be even have a different stem - or two!- in the past tenses.Weak, or regular verbs form their past tenses by the addition of the suffix, -d, -ed or -t, without changing the stem vowel. For example ask:asked; donate:donated; learn; learned or learnt. Some otherwise regular verbs may distinguish between the active and the passive past participle, for example proved:proven and mowed:mownNewly coined verbs are weak, and it may seem that the productive period of strong verbs is over, but the English speaker's affinity for the older, strong forms is still in operation, as seen in popular usages like dive:dove and sneak:snuck, where the "correct" past forms are dived and sneaked, respectively.
killkickkill
Some verbs beginning with K:keepkeptkeykickkickingkid (as in joke)killkillingkindlekinkkipkisskissingkneadkneekneelknellingknewknifeknitknockknotknowknucklekowtowkype (slang)Kick, kiss, to name a few. There aren't that many things you can do.Verbs that start with the letter k:keepkeptkibitzkickkidnapkillkindlekisskneelknewknitknockknotknow
· know
kicking krumping
Kick or kiss are both action verbs beginning with 'k'.
kind
There are action verbs, helping verbs and linking verbs. That would equal three different verbs in the English language. Adverbs are not verbs. They are NOT verbs at all. Who knows who named it? (k)
Examples of nouns:eareducationEdwardeggelephantemergencyemotionenvelopeessayemperorkangarooKansaskettlekitchenkitekneeknightknollknowledgekoalacabcabbagecabincharitycircuscoincommacuriositycushioncycleExamples of verbs:earneaseengineerescapeevolvekeepkillkneadknitknotcarrycrycurecutcycle