Pay is already a verb because it is an action. As in "to pay someone".
Pays, paying and paid are also verbs.
Some example sentences are:
"I will pay the bill later".
"She pays her fees".
"I am paying for my mistakes".
"Have you paid for that?"
Paid is the past tense of the verb pay.
pay
"Paid" is the past tense of the verb "to pay".
The past tense is paid.
The adjectives paid or paying do not have adverb forms. The verb pay is an action that does not lend itself to a way of acting as do expensively and extravagantly.
The noun form of the verb "pay" is "payment."
The word 'pay' functions as a verb and a noun.verb - I will pay the tax tomorrow.noun - She collects her pay on Mondays
The word 'pay' functions as a verb and a noun.verb - I will pay the tax tomorrow.noun - She collects her pay on Mondays
Yes. The verb is "to pay".
"Pay" can be a verb (action word) or a noun depending on how it is used in a sentence.
The word pay is both a verb (pay, pays, paying, paid) and a noun (uncountable).The noun 'pay' is a word for money received for doing work; a word for a thing.You can "pay" someone (verb). Or you can receive "pay" (noun).The noun forms of the verb to pay are payee, payer, payment, and the gerund, paying.
Paid is the past tense of the verb pay.
Remunerate
pay
No. Pay can be a verb (to spend money) or a noun (your wages), or noun adjunct (pay desk, pay increase), or possibly an adjective (pay toilet).
employ
employ