He decided to patch the trousers rather than throw them out.
Patch as a verb.I will patch your jeans later today.
The word 'patch' is a noun (patch, patches) and a verb (patch, patches, patching, patched).Examples:The patch on your jeans adds character. (noun)They need to patch that crack in the sidewalk. (verb)
The verb in this sentence is the word "is." When you use the verb "to be," you must use the correct form of it.
The word using is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb use.
The word would is a verb. An example sentence using the word would is, Jill would never go to the beach.
It depends. A part of speech explains not what the word is, but how the word is used. In fact, the same word can be a noun in one sentence and a verb or adjective in the next. For example:Books are made of ink, paper, and glue.In this sentence, "books" is a noun, the subject of the sentence.Deborah waits patiently while Bridget books the tickets.Therefore, if you plan to patch something, then it is a verb. If you are applying a patch, it is a noun. Additionally, the patch you are applying is in that statement the object of the sentence. Furthermore, if the patch is patching something, then the word is first the subject and then the predicate of the sentence, though subject, object, and predicate are not parts of speech, but rather, the three parts of a sentence. Parts of speechinclude nouns, pronouns, verbs, adverbs, adjectives, participles, conjunctions and interjections.Get it? ;)
I'm contemplating the answer again.
I need a bag of ice.
Dance with me, please!
The word "vivify" is a transitive verb. An example of a sentence using the word would be: Somehow, his brush with death had seemed to vivify him.
Acutally, it is an intransitive verb which needs a 'helping verb' such as have.......... A sentence using the word 'swum' could be: "I've swum to the island every day." The "'ve" stands for "have," a helping verb
Using a word that tells you someone is doing an acton