The verb form of investigation is investigate.
Investigates, investigating and investigated are verbs as well.
Some example sentences are:
"We will investigate the shootings".
"The detective investigates the strange noise in the basement".
"We are investigating the incident".
"The case was very well investigated".
Investigate is already a verb.
For example, "to investigate something" is an action and therefore a verb.
The verb form of "investigation" is "investigate."
Investigate can function as both a verb and a noun. As a verb, it means to carry out a systematic inquiry or examination; as a noun, it refers to the act of investigating or the process of conducting an investigation.
No. Investigate is a verb. One adjective form is the word "investigative."
No the word investigate is not a noun. It is a verb. The noun form is investigation.
No. Investigate is a verb. One adjective form is the word "investigative."
............put in this sentence? investigate = will investigate
It is not necessary to have one at all. It depends on what you want to say. The following examples are all valid sentences. I investigate often. I will investigate him. I can't investigate for you. I need to investigate over there. I must investigate before making a decision. I should investigate after nightfall. I can't investigate during the football match!
The noun forms for the verb to investigate are investigator, investigation, and the gerund, investigating.
The present perfect progressive tense of the verb "to investigate" is "have been investigating."
The word investigate is a verb, not a noun, and has no plural.The related noun is investigation, with the plural investigations.
The verb "investigate" has the meaning of looking into the cause of something.
Have/Has been investigating.