Your question makes little sense. "English tea" is a adjective-noun combination that creates more specificity for the noun (tea) by giving it a state or character (English). There are a number of things one can do with English tea, such as drink it, pour it, mix it, press it, and so forth, but "I English tea-ed you" is not a valid sentence because "English tea" is not a verb.
No, it is not a verb. Tea is a noun, a drink, or an occasion to drink it.
Yes, the form "Have you tea?" is technically correct but not a good modern form. The use of to have is seen in the modern form "Do you have tea?" -- This is the interrogative form of "you do have tea" as opposed to "you have tea."In this case "to have" is the verb and "do" is the auxiliary verb form, although similar in use to the modal verbs such as can.
The verb of enjoyment is enjoy.Other verbs depending on the tense are enjoys, enjoying and enjoyed.Some example sentences for you are:"I enjoy tea"."Scott enjoys Earl Grey tea"."Scott is enjoying an Earl Grey tea""He also enjoyed a tea earlier on".
English Tea - song - was created in 2005.
"Shai" is the Kikuyu word for the English word "tea".
The verb of enjoyment is enjoy.Other verbs depending on the tense are enjoys, enjoying and enjoyed.Some example sentences for you are:"I enjoy tea"."Scott enjoys Earl Grey tea"."Scott is enjoying an Earl Grey tea""He also enjoyed a tea earlier on".
steaming, boiling,
Because tea tastes niecececee i am english and i love tea, coffee is crap
The word think is already a verb because it is an action.Other verbs are thinks, thinking and thought.Some example sentences are:"I think I need a fresh cup of Earl Grey tea"."He thinks about tea"."I am thinking about tea"."I thought about tea, so I got some".
The verb 'am' is not an action verb, 'am' is a form of the verb 'to be', for example:I am...; you are...; he, she, it is...; we are...; they are...The verb 'am' can be a linking verb in a sentence, for example: I am tall.The verb 'am' can be a helping verb in a sentence, for example: I am drinking tea.
no
There is no such English phrase as "tea of a cup." You either have a cup of tea, or you have tea in a cup.