causing
Action verb
The word caused is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb cause.
It's either a verb, as in 'I'll cause that to happen', or a noun as in 'what's the cause of that?'
The verb "investigate" has the meaning of looking into the cause of something.
The word caused is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb cause.
No, cause is a noun or verb.
The verb "investigate" has a similar meaning as "look into the cause of something."
The verb extinguish means:to cause (something) to stop burning, orto cause the end or death of (something)
I/you/we/they cause. He/she/it causes. The present participle is causing.
A verb for danger is endanger. As in "to endanger someone or something" or "to cause a danger".
No, the word "cause" is not a linking verb. It is a transitive verb that shows an action or an effect that one thing has on another. Linking verbs connect the subject of a sentence to a subject complement, such as in "She is happy" where "is" is a linking verb.
In the term 'cause and effect', the words 'cause' and 'effect' are nouns, joined by the conjunction 'and'; they are singular, common, abstract nouns.The term 'cause and effect' can be used as a compound subject of a sentence or clause and the compound object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:The cause and effect are obvious in retrospect.You must consider the cause and effect before you decide to act.The word cause is also a verb: cause, causes, causing, caused.The word effect is also a verb: effect, effects, effecting, effected.