The verb form is educate.
verb is education and the tense is plural
Educate.
it is neither. Education is a noun. To educate is a verb. Adjective forms are educational and educated.
education
educate
The verb of education is educate.Other verbs depending on the tense are educates, educating and educated.Some example sentences are:"I will educate you about verbs"."She educates us on steampunk writing"."We are educating the people"."They have been well educated".
The noun forms for the verb to educate are educator, education, and the gerund, educating.
role
No, knowledge is not a verb. It is a noun that refers to the information, facts, and skills acquired through experience, education, or learning.
The verb for expansion is expand.Other verbs are expands, expanding and expanded."We will expand the empire"."Her horizons were expanding"."His education has expanded his knowledge".
Education is a noun. It does not have a tense. However, you can say that someone was educated. That would be the past tense of the verb educate.
There is no predicate adjective in that sentence. In order for a sentence to have a predicate adjective, the verb must be a linking verb. Example: Mary is happy. ("is" is a linking verb, and "happy" is a predicate adjective) In the sentence "Your sister Mary teaches math and physical education at the high school", the verb (teaches) is transitive (a type of action verb that takes a direct object).