The verb of modern is modernise.
Other verbs are modernises, modernising and modernised.
Some example sentences are:
"We will modernise out offices".
"He modernises his house".
"We plan on modernising the building".
"We modernised the computers".
The verb for "modern" is "modernize," which means to adapt or bring up to date according to contemporary styles or standards.
The verb form of "modern" is "modernize."
The verb form of "modern" is "modernize," which means to update or bring something current with new technologies or practices.
Get is a verb in modern speech: 'I will get the bread from the cupboard.'However, there is an old usage where it is a noun, meaning offspring (children): 'My horse is the get of Mr. Smith's stallion.'
No, "till" is not a preposition. It is a conjunction or a verb in Modern English. It can be used as a conjunction to mean "up to the time of" or as a verb meaning to work the soil before planting.
No, the word 'headed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to head.The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:After the game we headed for home. (verb)A flat headed screw won't protrude from the surface. (adjective)The word 'head' is a verb, an adjective, and a noun.Examples:I've been selected to head the committee. (verb)You can give your resume to the head librarian. (adjective)What I know about modern art would fit on the head of a pin. (noun)
The verb form for the word modern is "modernize."
Yes, the form "Have you tea?" is technically correct but not a good modern form. The use of to have is seen in the modern form "Do you have tea?" -- This is the interrogative form of "you do have tea" as opposed to "you have tea."In this case "to have" is the verb and "do" is the auxiliary verb form, although similar in use to the modal verbs such as can.
O. Chondronasiou has written: 'Verb alternations and semantic verb classes in English and Modern Greek'
Get is a verb in modern speech: 'I will get the bread from the cupboard.'However, there is an old usage where it is a noun, meaning offspring (children): 'My horse is the get of Mr. Smith's stallion.'
The word grateful comes from the archaic adjective grate, meaning thankful. In modern English, the verb for grateful would be thank.
The verb "surprise" is normally, in modern English, a transitive verb; that is, it requires an object. Examples are "You really surprise me!" and "I will surprise you." It could, however used as an intransitive verb, that is, without the object: "Oh my, how you do like to surprise!" But this is much less common.
I'm pretty sure it's a verb... Praise is a verb, because that is what you are doing. :) But to make it an Adverb, you could say Praisingly (i guess)
No, the verb is a single word "to uprise". This verb is almost never used in modern language, except as the terms "uprising" or possibly "uprisen". More commonly the verb "rise" is used, modified by the adverb "up".
Founder can be a noun or a verb. Noun: "Louis Pasteur is sometimes considered the founder of modern medicine." Verb: "We were far from shore, and the ship had begun to founder."
ΠΑΡΑΛΥΩ / παραλύω (verb: παραλύειν) ( = ΠΑΡΑ + ΛΥΩ* ). *ΛΥΝΩ, in modern Greek.
To move or act swiftly; hurry. This word is archaic and rare. The common modern term is hastening. (The older verb to haste has been replaced with the verb to hasten).
Noel McGonagle has written: 'The inflexion of the irregular verb in modern Gaelic dialects'