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.
began is an action verb, not a linking verb.
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.
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)
action verb because you did this action (sent)
The verb in "It has a long nose" is has. There is no adverb in that sentence.
what follows a linking or action verb