No. Shaken is the past participle of the verb shake, and is used as an adjective, The other adjective for shake is shaky and the adverb form is "shakily."
Shook is a verb. When you can't tell, change the word to a present tense one, shake. Then ask yourself, can you shake?Yes, so it is a verb.
The past tense of shake is shook, not shaken.
Yes, it is an adjective. It is the comparative form of the adjective dark.
shaking
No, it is a verb form (to shake) or an adjective. The noun is shake.
No. Shaken is the past participle of the verb shake, and is used as an adjective, The other adjective for shake is shaky and the adverb form is "shakily."
Shook is a verb. When you can't tell, change the word to a present tense one, shake. Then ask yourself, can you shake?Yes, so it is a verb.
The word 'shaken' is the past participle of the verb to shake (shakes, shaking, shaken). The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, a word to describe a noun. Examples: Verb: He had shaken his soda so that it sprayed in his face when he opened the can. Adjective: The shaken woman was able to give the officer a good description of the purse-snatcher.
It could be both. Strictly speaking, a word that denotes an action is a verb, e.g.: The Earth shook. Here, 'shook' is the past tense form of the verb 'to shake', which is an action. An adjective is a word that describes another, e.g.: The shaking boy wasn't sure whether the present participle of the verb 'to shake' in this sentence is an adjective or not. Here, 'shaking' is describing the boy. Shaking is still an action and therefore a verb, but it's also a description, and therefore an adjective. We call such words 'adverbs'. Have fun...
Amigo's Parlor Shake Shake Shake was created in 2000.
K.C. and the Sunshine Band. Shake Your Booty.
The future tense of "shake" is "will shake" or "shall shake."
Metro- Station
i only know one song and that is of cours Shake It by metro station it has the lyrics shake shake shake shake shake it there's also the song by outkast shake it like a polaroid picture .... i believe it's called hey ya
shake after what?
Yes, the base word of "tremendous" is "tremend." The -ous suffix is added to form the adjective "tremendous."