Laughing. Because verbs are action words (doing words), they usually end in the letters 'ing. You can tell what words are verbs because it says what someone is doing.
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The infinitive is "to laugh."
Laugh is the verb of laugher.
Other verbs, which depend on the tense, are laughs, laughing and laughed.
Some example sentences are:
"I laugh sarcastically at the lame joke".
"She laughs along with me".
"We are all laughing, although the joke was awful".
"Now we are confused about why we laughed in the first place".
Laughter is a noun. Laugh, laughs, laughing, and laughed are the verb forms.
Laughter is a noun, as in the 'sound' of laughing
The term 'peals of laughter' is a prepositional phrase.The noun 'laughter' is the object of the preposition 'of'.The noun 'peals' is a partitive noun, a noun used to quantify an uncountable noun (laughter).
No. Laughing is a verb, laughter is a noun. An example of an adverb used in a sentence would be - The announcer was laughing loudly as he fell out of his chair. Loudly is the adverb.
Yes, it can be, to mean either subdued (restrained laughter) or physically secured (a restrained prisoner). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to restrain, so is otherwise a verb form.
Laughter is a noun. Laugh, laughs, laughing, and laughed are the verb forms.
To change "laughter" into a verb, you can use "laugh." For example, "She laughs loudly at his jokes."
Laughter is a noun, as in the 'sound' of laughing
It means the sound of laughing. Laughter is the noun form of the verb "to laugh."
The term 'peals of laughter' is a prepositional phrase.The noun 'laughter' is the object of the preposition 'of'.The noun 'peals' is a partitive noun, a noun used to quantify an uncountable noun (laughter).
The word laughed is the past participle of the verb to laugh, which is also an adjective. The present participle of a verb (the -ing word) is a verbal noun called a gerund, laughing; the present participle of the verb is also an adjective (laughingchildren).The abstract noun form for the verb to laugh is laughing(laughing makes you feel good). Other noun forms are the word laugh (a good laugh) and laughter (the sound of laughter).
Quite laughter is the action and sound of laughing with no noise. A quiet laugh indicates mild amusement. The word laugh can be used as a verb or a noun.
No. Laughing is a verb, laughter is a noun. An example of an adverb used in a sentence would be - The announcer was laughing loudly as he fell out of his chair. Loudly is the adverb.
The verb form of laugher is laugh.Other verbs are laughs, laughing and laughed."I will laugh in your face"."We were laughing all night"."The audience laughed at the comedian".
Yes, it can be, to mean either subdued (restrained laughter) or physically secured (a restrained prisoner). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to restrain, so is otherwise a verb form.
The noun 'laughter' is an uncountable noun. Units of laughter are expressed in amounts such as some laughter, a lot of laughter, much laughter, etc.
'Risata' is an Italian equivalent of 'laughter'. It's a feminine noun whose definite article is 'la' ['the'] and whose indefinite article is 'una' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'ree-SAH-tah'.Some take the infinitive 'ridere' ['to laugh'] to mean 'laughter'. They put the masculine definite article 'il' ['the'] or the indefinite 'uno' ['a, one'] before the verb to turn it into a noun. The verb used as a noun is pronounced 'REE-deh-reh'.