Enslave is the verb of the word slave.
Some other verbs which depend on the tense are enslaves, enslaving and enslaved.
Some example sentences for you are:
The verb for slave is "to slave."
You can use "slave" as a verb in a sentence like "He slaved away in the kitchen all day preparing the meal for the family."
No, the noun 'slave' and the verb to 'slave' are base words.The noun forms are slave (singular) and slaves (plural).The verb forms are slave, slaves slaving, and slaved.
No, "slave" is not an adjective. It is a noun. A slave is a person who is the legal property of another and is forced to obey them.
"Slaved" can be both a verb (past tense of "slave") and a noun (referring to a person who is enslaved).
The given sentence is not correct: It should probably read, "What did your last slave die from?", with no "d" on "die". The compound verb form is "did ... die", which was formally named the "intensive past tense" when I was young. In practice, it might as well be called the "interrogative past tense", since it is primarily used to ask questions by separating the two words of the compound verb. However, the tense is also used for emphasis with normal word order, as in, "The mistreated slave did die, even though his rescuers gave him the best medical treatment available." Whatever the name of the tense, it is formed by combining the auxiliary verb "do", properly inflected for the tense to be intensified, in this instance "did" for the past tense, with the infinitive form of the verb to be intensified, not the past participle of that verb as in the given sentence. Formal style would also call for the word order to be changed to "From what did your last slave die?", to avoid ending with a preposition.
The verb form of "slave" is "enslave."
Slavery
You can use "slave" as a verb in a sentence like "He slaved away in the kitchen all day preparing the meal for the family."
No, the noun 'slave' and the verb to 'slave' are base words.The noun forms are slave (singular) and slaves (plural).The verb forms are slave, slaves slaving, and slaved.
SLAVE is a noun, therefore it has no tenses. TO ENSLAVE is the verb (Past Tense = enslaved)
No, "slave" is not an adjective. It is a noun. A slave is a person who is the legal property of another and is forced to obey them.
The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'slave' is slavery; a word for a state of subjection of other people; a word for a concept.The abstract noun form of the verb to 'slave' is the gerund, slaving.
Yes, slaves is a noun. It is the plural of the noun slave, a word for a person who is the legal property of another; a person who has lost self-control and is controlled by something or someone else.The word slaves is also a verb, the third person, singular present of the verb to slave.
Collective nouns for slaves are a gang of slaves or a coffle of slaves.
"Slaved" can be both a verb (past tense of "slave") and a noun (referring to a person who is enslaved).
I would guess there should be a verb in here, like dat, meaning '(he/she/it) gives.' With that verb, I'd translate this sentence as: "The slave-woman gave wine to the master."
The given sentence is not correct: It should probably read, "What did your last slave die from?", with no "d" on "die". The compound verb form is "did ... die", which was formally named the "intensive past tense" when I was young. In practice, it might as well be called the "interrogative past tense", since it is primarily used to ask questions by separating the two words of the compound verb. However, the tense is also used for emphasis with normal word order, as in, "The mistreated slave did die, even though his rescuers gave him the best medical treatment available." Whatever the name of the tense, it is formed by combining the auxiliary verb "do", properly inflected for the tense to be intensified, in this instance "did" for the past tense, with the infinitive form of the verb to be intensified, not the past participle of that verb as in the given sentence. Formal style would also call for the word order to be changed to "From what did your last slave die?", to avoid ending with a preposition.