The verb form of imitation is imitate.
Other verbs are imitates, imitating and imitated.
Some example sentences are:
"We imitate the instructors movements".
"The baby imitates her mother".
"I am imitating you".
"He jokily imitated his boss' hand gestures".
Imitate is already a verb because it is an action. As in "to imitate".
Imitates, imitating and imitated are also verbs.
"A baby will often imitate his or her parents".
"He is imitating his mentor".
No. Imitate is a verb as it describes an action.
No, the word 'imitate' is a verb (imitate, imitates, imitating, imitated), meaning to copy something; to mimic someone.The noun forms of the verb to imitate are imitator, imitation, and the gerund, imitating.
The abstract noun form of the verb to imitate are imitation and the gerund, imitating.
No, the word 'imitates' is a verb, the third person, singular, present of the verb to 'imitate'.The noun forms of the verb to imitate are imitator, imitation, and the gerund, imitating.
The past participle of imitate is imitated. Imitate is a regular verb which means the simple past tense is also imitated. All regular verbs have a past tense ending in -ed.
No, the word 'imitated' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to imitate. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:John imitated the mannerisms of his teacher. (verb)It's the most imitated brand on the market. (adjective)The noun forms of the verb to imitate are imitator, imitation, and the gerund, imitating.
Intimate comes from early 17th century (as a noun): from late Latin intimatus, past participle of Latin intimare'impress, make familiar,' from intimus 'inmost.' As a verb, early 16th century: from late Latin intimate- 'made known,' from the verb intimare, the noun intimation dates from late Middle English.
Mimic- Verb To copy or repeat what someone say or does;to imitate
Imitated is a verb. It's the past tense of imitate.
Yes, imitated, the past tense of imitate, is a verb.A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
The verb is imitate, it's called doing an impression; a professional who fakes the voice of famous people is called an impressionist.
The ending -ate is typical of verbs that have a noun form ending in -tion.