I want to polish the medallion that the Polish government gave to my uncle.
My boots could use a quick polish.
I need to polish my shoes before the big event.
In the sentence, "She used a cloth to polish the silverware," the word "polish" is a verb. It is the action that the subject ("she") is performing on the silverware.
She used a soft cloth to polish the silverware until it gleamed.
noun.What part of speech is the word polish in this sentence.This is a better way of asking the question, words don't don't play as parts of speech.
The Polish word for Polish is "polski."
The word "tarnish" in the sentence "the silver will tarnish if it is not polished often" is a verb. It is describing the action of the silver in the sentence.
In the sentence, "She used a cloth to polish the silverware," the word "polish" is a verb. It is the action that the subject ("she") is performing on the silverware.
polish and Polish.Additional answerI don't think this is correct. It's not the capitalisation that's causing the change in pronounciation, its the meaning of the word. If you had a sentence "Polish those shoes before you go" you wouldn't pronounce the "Polish" any differently to the same word in this sentence "I'm going to polish my shoes".But if you said "My shoes are Polish", then you would.
She used a soft cloth to polish the silverware until it gleamed.
Polly's job was to polish knives.
noun.What part of speech is the word polish in this sentence.This is a better way of asking the question, words don't don't play as parts of speech.
The Polish word for Polish is "polski."
The word "tarnish" in the sentence "the silver will tarnish if it is not polished often" is a verb. It is describing the action of the silver in the sentence.
The nail polish had some tariffs in Tarrin town.
"Chicago, with one of largest Polish populations on Earth, is regrarded as a haven for new arrived Polish immigrants."
A. J. Szwedek has written: 'Word order, sentence stress and reference in English and Polish' -- subject(s): Comparative Grammar, Contrastive linguistics, English, English language, Polish, Polish language, Reference (Linguistics) 'The thematic structure of the sentence in English and Polish' -- subject(s): Accents and accentuation, Comparative Grammar, Sentences, English language, Word order, English, Polish, Polish language
The polish word for scarf is "szalik."
The word "EASILY" is an adverb in this sentence. It modifies the verb "removed," indicating how the tarnish can be removed.