"Held" already is a "strong" verb in the grammatical sense, because it is the irregular past tense of "hold". If the questioner means "strong" in the intensive sense, perhaps "clenched" would be suitable.
Grasped.
No, "were held" is not a compound word. It is a verb phrase made up of the auxiliary verb "were" and the main verb "held."
The verb for strong is strengthen.The other verbs for this word are strengthens, strengthening and strengthened."We will be strengthening this pier"."This beam strengthens the building"."I hope these lessons have strengthened your mind".
"Strong" can be both an adjective and an adverb, but it is not commonly used as a verb or a noun.
"held" can be a verb (past tense of "hold") or an adjective (meaning something that is kept or retained). It is not a noun or pronoun.
"Changed" is a verb. It is the past tense form of the verb "change."
Yes, held is an action verb.
The verb to make strong is to strengthen.
The verb to make strong is to strengthen.
The strong word for race in a verb is raced
A strong verb for had is possessed, retained, owned, etc.
No, strong is an adjective.
The verb for strong is strengthen.Explanation:If you change strong into a noun (strength) you can then change it into a verb. (strengthen)
future passive third person neuter verb
Held is the past tense of the verb hold. A noun is a person, place, or thing so held is not a noun but a verb.
"Changed" is a verb. It is the past tense form of the verb "change."
There is no strong verb for play - played.
"held" can be a verb (past tense of "hold") or an adjective (meaning something that is kept or retained). It is not a noun or pronoun.