There's no verb for being friendly. You can just say "being friendly". To say "make friends" you can say "befriend".
The action verb for the adjective 'friendly' is befriend.Example: I don't have a garden but I befriend the neighbors who do.More recently, the noun friend has become a verb, in the context of the internet. A related form of the verb 'to friend' is 'to unfriend'.Example: He wants to friend me on Facebook.
Break is a verb when used without an object. As in 'to break off friendly relations'
No, it is not. It is an adjective, generally the opposite of the adjective friendly.
'To make friends with'or 'to be friends with', or 'to be friendly with'.
No, it is not an adverb. Roughhousing is a verb form and gerund (noun) for the verb "to roughhouse" (fight, wrestle or tussle in a friendly way).
'Friendly' is an adjective because you'd use it to describe someone. Any word that can be used to describe someone (a noun) is an adjective.
No, "friendly" is an adjective describing a characteristic or quality of a subject in a sentence. It is not a predicate object, which typically refers to the noun or pronoun that receives the action of the verb in a sentence.
The verb "compete" means to strive in a usually friendly or playful way and in a controlled setting to outperform another individual or group in a given activity.
The word 'chat' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'chat' is a word for a friendly conversation; a word for a thing.The noun forms of the verb to chat are chatter and the gerund, chatting.
No, "fellowship" is a noun, which refers to friendly association or companionship. It can also refer to a grant or stipend awarded to support academic study or research.
No, is the word 'friendly' is an adjective or an adverb.Examples:He seems like a friendly dog. (adjective)They friendly offered their help. (adverb)