These are some French possible words:
réaliser
cerner
comprendre
Depending on the context, some English words that might apply, and some examples:
Analyze: ..... Figure out what went wrong.
Examine: .... Figure out the cause of death.
Evaluate: .... Figure out the best approach.
Investigate:. Figure out what the clues mean
Interpret: ....Figure out what that Spanish phrase means.
Solve: ........ Figure out that Rubik's cube. Figure out the equation.
calculate
calculate deduce reckon evaluate infer (in the sense of figure out how something works rather than its value).
figure is the subject can look is the verb
i think this is the answer for sure :noun
No, the word figure is not an adverb.The word figure is a verb ("we will figure this out") and a noun ("the figure crept closer").
The verb that means to laugh foolishly or nervously is "titter."
No, reprehended isn't a figure of speech, it's the past tense of the verb 'to reprehend', which means to scold, rebuke, criticize, or disapprove. Example sentence: Mom reprehended me for leaving my bike in the driveway.
Vivir in spanish means to live or to be alive
It can be. 'Green means go' is a sentence using means as a verb. It can also be a noun, for instance in the sentence 'He was a man of limited means'.
A part of speech -- there are eight -- defines the classification of a word.For example, run is a verb, house is a noun and so forth.A figure of speech is a phrase used for emphasis which is not real.For example, 'you eat like a horse' doesn't mean that the person eats standing on all fours with chin in trough munching on oats. That figure of speech means that the person consumes more than average amounts of food.So a figure of speech is not a part of speech in the sense implied by your question.Another answer:'Figure of speech' is a noun phrase.
An action verb is something the noun in the sentence is doing. It helps asking "can something do this?" to figure out if it is an action verb or a linking verb. A linking verb is something that you cannot do. For example, something cannot 'is'. However, is is a verb. To be exact, it is a linking verb.
tarried is from the verb "tarry", to wait. So no tarried is not a figure of speech, it is a point of fact.