The noun forms of the verb to navigate are navigator, navigation, and the gerund, navigating.
The abstract noun forms of the verb to navigate are navigation and the gerund, navigating.
Navigate is a verb.
No, "narrow" is not a noun. It is an adjective used to describe something that has a small width in comparison to its length.
The suffix of the word navigate is ate. This suffix is a noun that means function and other examples include delegate and amputate.
The word navigational is the adjective form of the noun navigation.The verb form is to navigate.
The word 'navigation' is a noun, a word for the theory or practice of charting a course for a ship or aircraft; a way to find or follow a path through a difficult place or deal effectively with a complicated situation; a word for a thing.The verb is to navigate (navigates, navigating, navigated).The noun forms of the verb to navigate are navigator and the gerund, navigating.
The adjective for the noun navigation is navigational. The related verb to navigate has the adjective forms navigating, navigated, and navigable.
The verb for navigational is navigate. As in "to navigate a course".
navigate
The verb of navigation is navigate.Other verbs depending on the tense you need is navigates, navigating, navigated.Some example sentences are:"I will navigate the boat"."She navigates through the asteroid belt"."We are navigating through the new system"."They down navigated the river".
This inlet is difficult to navigate, even during high tide. You drive; I'll navigate.
Will you navigate me to the Chinese bus