pried
Yes it is, it is something that you do which means it is a verb (A verb is something that you do.)
The past tense is 'pulled'
No, "pulled" is not a preposition. It is a past participle verb that can be used in various tenses.
yes it is
it depends on the context, but if it's "i pulled a tooth" then no.
It can be either. It can also be a verb or a noun. As an adjective, it's the comparative form of the adjective, 'good.' "This hat is better than mine." As an adverb, it's the comparative of 'well.' "I behave better than you." As a verb, it means 'to improve.' "We bettered last year's record." As a noun, it usually means 'wiser.' "It was the better of the two choices."
No, it is a verb form, the past tense and past participle of the verb "to pull." It can be used as an adjective (pulledmuscle).
"More better" in any context is grammatically incorrect. The verb tenses are better and best. "Better than before" is grammatically correct. Example sentence: While the judges thought Mary's cake was better than before, they decided John's baking was better.
Taught = past tense of the verb teachTaut = adjective, stretched or pulled tight.,
The indefinite pronoun 'some' can take a singular or plural form of the verb. For example: Some is better than nothing. Some are better than others.
A ripcord is a device (rope, wire, line, chain, string, etc.) that is PULLED to release something.
Had ridden, is the better irregular verb.