humane..
Yes, "human resources" is considered a singular noun and should be paired with a singular verb.
The verb in the sentence is "may have been." This is a modal verb construction that expresses possibility or uncertainty about the past action of caves being the first human dwellings.
The linking verb in the sentence is "meet". It connects the subject "newspaper" to the complement "some human needs".
No, the word 'child' is a noun, not a verb. The word 'baby' can be used as both a noun and verb.
Yes, "understands" is a verb.
Personification is a noun. The corresponding verb is personify.
The verb form of human is humanise (humanize in US English).Humanises, humanising and humanised are also related verbs."I will humanise the zombie if I can"."These animals have been too humanised".
It is a verb that indicates a relationship ........of two things.
The word nose can be a noun and a verb. The noun form is the sensory organ on a human's face. The verb form means to snoop.
No, the word human is a noun and an adjective. Examples:Noun: The human was the lead character in the science fiction movie.Adjective: Fear is part of the human condition.
To make a statement an example of personification, you would use a verb that attributes human qualities or actions to non-human entities. For instance, if the statement is "The wind howled," the verb "howled" gives the wind a human action, making it personified. Similarly, using verbs like "whispered" or "danced" in relation to inanimate objects or natural elements would also create personification.
No, it is a noun. A son is a male child (human offspring), whose direct ancestor is his father.