Want this question answered?
Her primary purpose is to entertain the reader.
The future tense of entertain is will entertain.
No the word entertain is a verb not an adverb. The adverb form is entertainingly.
The past participle of "entertain" is "entertained".
The abstract noun forms of the verb to entertain are entertainment and the gerund, entertaining.The concrete noun for the verb to entertain is entertainer, a word for a person.
Her primary purpose is to entertain the reader.
Perform and act are the two words that are used to describe how to entertain an audience.
The author's purpose is to inform, persuade, entertain, or express their thoughts and ideas on a particular topic or issue.
Yes, the verb is to entertain: I entertain You entertain He entertains She entertains We entertain They entertain
The future tense of entertain is will entertain.
Tragedy is the genre of literature that describes "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the literary form is drama. The literary genre is the depiction of suffering to entertain and instruct an audience. The media is performance.
to entertain = bidehr (בידר)
No the word entertain is a verb not an adverb. The adverb form is entertainingly.
The past participle of "entertain" is "entertained".
The past tense of entertain is entertained.
The word 'entertain' is a verb, a word for an action. Example:Mayzie will entertain you with her rendition of "Let Me Entertain You".
I think that you should entertain him with the things he likes, but when you do entertain him, make sure it is something you like to do also.