The verb for item is itemise (or itemize in US English).
Other verbs are itemises, itemising and itemised.
Some example sentences are:
"We will itemise the stock".
"He itemises the new arrivals".
"We are itemising everything we have".
"This is all itemised"
No it is not.Covered can be an adjective to mean overlaid with an item such as a blanket.It can also be a verb. It is the past tense of the verb to cover.
The word steep can be an adjective and a verb. The adjective form means to be of a near vertical gradient. The verb form means to soak an item in a liquid such as water to add or remove components to or from it.
The word 'expense' is both a noun and a verb.The verb to 'expense' means to offset an item of expenditure against taxable income; to charge something to an expense account; a word for an action.
to itemize.
The nouns in the sentence are:US (abbreviation for United States), the name of a place; object of the preposition 'in';cell phones, compound noun, a word for a thing(s); subject of the sentence;item, a word for a thing; subject complement following the linking verb 'are'.
The word is spelled disinfectant. The base word is infect; "dis-" is a prefix. To disinfect is the verb; disinfectant is the noun, or the item used to disinfect.
Synonyms for the word encapsulate are (to) box, cover, envelope and warp. The word encapsulate is a verb, it is in the present tense, and it means to enclose/wrap and item.
Depends on how the word is used. Fudge is a food item made for sweet and chocolate taste, which is an item or noun by definition. When used as as a verb it means to lie or embellish.
A verb for valuable could be valuate. As in "to valuate the worth of an item".
The word sought may be one of these:devote - (verb) to commit or dedicate effortdevoid (of) - (adjective) empty or lacking the named item
the word were is a LINKING VERB.
The word 'be' is indeed a verb.