maked
No. The word makes is a form of the verb to make. An adjective form of the word is "made" (produced).
Joined is a verb as it makes part of the verb to join. It's the preterite form of that verb.
"Preventable" is an adjective, not a verb! "Preventable" is, of course, derived from the verb "prevent", but that does not make "preventable" a verb form any more than its makes "prevention", which is a noun.
"Preventable" is an adjective, not a verb! "Preventable" is, of course, derived from the verb "prevent", but that does not make "preventable" a verb form any more than its makes "prevention", which is a noun.
No, it is not an adverb. Makes is a form of the verb "to make."
Makes is the first person singular form of make. eg He makes good pancakes. My sister makes bad pancakes. Make is an irregular verb because the past tense form does not end in -ed. There is a different word for the past tense. make - made Walk is a regular verb walk - walked.
'To make' is a verb. 'Make' can also be a noun ('What is the make of your new car?') 'Make' can never be an adjective though.
No, it is not. It is a verb form or plural noun. It is the present tense, third person singular of the verb to make (he, she, it makes). It can be a plural of the noun "make" when referring to types of cars (models and makes).
A verb. Not any verb will do, though; it must be a verb for which this form (reflexive form) makes sense.
The word 'makes' is both a noun (make, makes) and a verb (make, makes, making, made).Examples:What make of car do you drive? (noun)We make all types of cakes. (verb)The noun forms of the verb to make are maker and the gerund, making.
Yes, it is an irregular verb. Because it stem-changes (e-->i), that makes it an irregular verb. No only that, but it has an irregular yo form in the present tense (vengo), which makes it even more irregular.
The auxiliary verb is have.The verb 'have' makes the past participle verb 'studied' a present perfect form.