A verb for office could be officed.
Another verb would be officing.
profit is a verb
Account is both a noun and verb. Example of the verb form: "I was asked to account for my time."
Paid is the past tense of the verb pay.
Receipt can be a verb, it is a regular verb. It means to mark something as being paid. John receipted the invoice and passed it on to the accounts department
front office cashier is the person in front office dept. who handles front office cash flow.
The verbs in the sentence are "is" (a linking verb) and "coming" (the main action verb).
Is and coming are the verbs in this sentence.'is' is a present tense be verb.'coming' is the continuous for of come.You could say is coming is the verb.
Estudiar is the verb for "to study". A "study", as in a small office, is despacho
"must report at the office" is the complete predicate of the sentence. It includes the main verb "report" and the prepositional phrase "at the office."
The word search is a regular verb. Search can also be a noun as in (e.g.) the officers carried out a search on the office.
A verb that has the form verb + -s is used with singular subjects egwalks talks waits jumps etc -- The doctor walks to work.Sometimes the spelling is verb + -es egwatches catches does -- The office girl catches the bus to work.
No, "official" is not a verb. It is an adjective used to describe something that is authorized or approved by an authority.
That is the correct spelling of the past tense verb or adjective "elected" (voted into office).
The word wait is a verb (wait, waits, waiting, waited), but wait is also a noun. Example sentence: The wait at the doctor's office was very long.
The future tense of the verb remove is simply "will remove."Ex. We will remove the desk from your office tomorrow.
"will call" is a verb. It's the future tense of call. "will-call" (usually hyphenated) is a noun and an adjective. It's a place where items previously purchase can be picked up. "Your tickets are at the will-call office."
Yes, 'see' is a verb: see, sees, seeing, seen, saw. The word 'see' also has an obscure use as a noun: official seat, center of authority, jurisdiction, or office of a bishop.