The word 'urge' is a noun as a word for a strong feeling of wanting or needing to do something or to have something; a word for a strong impulse.
The noun form of the verb to urge is the gerund, urging.
urged, i think. :)
1. (noun) urge, impulsean instinctive motive"profound religious impulses"2. (verb) urge, itcha strong restless desire"why this urge to travel?"3. (verb) urge, urge on, press, exhortforce or impel in an indicated direction"I urged him to finish his studies"4. (verb) recommend, urge, advocatepush for something"The travel agent recommended strongly that we not travel on Thanksgiving Day"5. (verb) cheer, root on, inspire, urge, barrack, urge on, exhort, pep upspur on or encourage especially by cheers and shouts"The crowd cheered the demonstrating strikers"
"Urge" is an English equivalent of the French word envie.Specifically, the French word is a feminine noun. It literally means "craving, desire, urge." Its singular definite article is l* ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is une("a, one").The pronunciation is "aw-vee."*The article actually is la. But the vowel a drops before a noun that begins with a vowel. The temporary nature of that drop is indicated by an apostrophe immediately after the remaining letter l and immediately before the first letter of the following noun.
No, the word 'preach' is a verb, meaning to proclaim or put forth in a sermon; to advocate or to urge acceptance publicly.The noun forms of the verb to preach are preacher and the gerund, preaching.
An antonym is a word that means the opposite of something else. So no, urge is not an antonym. It has antonyms, and it is the antonym of other words, but it is not, in itself, an antonym.
* dirge * urge * verge * splurge * serge
No, "exhort" is not a noun. It is a verb that means to strongly encourage or urge someone to do something.
1. (noun) urge, impulsean instinctive motive"profound religious impulses"2. (verb) urge, itcha strong restless desire"why this urge to travel?"3. (verb) urge, urge on, press, exhortforce or impel in an indicated direction"I urged him to finish his studies"4. (verb) recommend, urge, advocatepush for something"The travel agent recommended strongly that we not travel on Thanksgiving Day"5. (verb) cheer, root on, inspire, urge, barrack, urge on, exhort, pep upspur on or encourage especially by cheers and shouts"The crowd cheered the demonstrating strikers"
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun "spurs" (boot prongs used to urge horses).
The word irresistible is an adjective and sometimes a noun. Example uses: Adjective: I had an irresistible urge to buy these shoes. Noun: The irresistible can be resisted, it's just not easy to do.
The word 'spur' is both a noun (spur, spurs) and a verb (spur, spurs, spurring, spurred). The noun spur is a common, singular noun; a word for devises put on your shoes to signal a horse to move forward. The verb spur means to goad or urge into action; to proceed hurriedly; to press forward.
No, an egg is not a verb. It is a noun, referring to a food item or the reproductive body produced by birds.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is the present participle of the verb to urge and can be a verb or a noun (gerund). The participles urging and urged do not function well as adjectives.
We urge you to put the gun down.She had a sudden urge to eat all of the chocolate cake.
The suffix of "urge" is "-e".
We urge you to do your homework, and get off the computer.
I felt the urge to smack him in the face.
Urge Overkill was created in 1986.