Cleans
Yes, inhale is a regular verb.
Yes, smelling is a verb. It is an action word that describes the act of perceiving odors through the nose.
It is an action verb.
Smell can function as both a verb and a noun. As a verb, it describes the action of detecting odors with the nose. As an adjective, it describes something having a scent or odor.
"Sneezed" is the past tense form of the verb "sneeze," which is an action verb. It describes an action that someone has performed, specifically the act of expelling air from the nose and mouth suddenly. As a regular verb, it follows standard conjugation rules, adding "-ed" to form its past tense.
The present simple tense of the verb "clean" is "clean" for the pronouns I, you, we, and they (e.g., I clean the house every day). For the pronouns he, she, and it, it is "cleans" (e.g., She cleans the dishes after dinner).
Yes, the word 'nose' is both a noun (nose, noses) and a verb (nose, noses, nosing, nosed). Examples: Noun: The ball hit him in the nose. Verb: I know how to nose out his secrets.
"Nose" is a noun. It does not have a past tense form, as it is not a verb or action. Nose is also a verb it means: 1. (of an animal) thrust its nose against or into something - smell or sniff (something). 2. look around or pry into something. make one's way slowly ahead, especially in a vehicle.
began is an action verb, not a linking verb.
No, the word 'runny' is not a verb.The word 'runny' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The action verbs are: run, runs, running, ran.Examples:Jack can't run today. (verb)He has a runny nose. (adjective)
The verb in "It has a long nose" is has. There is no adverb in that sentence.
action verb because you did this action (sent)