The verb form is hasten.
"Height" is the noun form for "high," and "heighten" is the verb form.
The verb of done is do. As in "to do something".
The verb form is to choose (chooses, choosing, chosen).
No, it is not an adverb. Disappearing is a verb form, and a gerund (noun).
eat. Well it depends on what you mean. 'Hot fudge' doesn't have a verb form this phrase is and adjective + noun and neither of these words have verb forms. But you could say: I eat hot fudge - verb = eat They cook hot fudge - verb = cook
what is the form of the verb answer it ..............
No, the form "it's" is a contraction, a shortened form for "it is".The contraction "it's" functions as the subject and the verb (or auxiliary verb) of a sentence or a clause.Example: It's a very hot day. Or: It is a very hot day.The possessive form of the pronoun "it" is its (no apostrophe).Example: The dog curled up in its place on the mat.
The verb form of "involvement" is "involve."
The word 'hot' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. The forms for the adjective are hot, hotter, and hottest.The closest verb to the adjective 'hot' is a verb for 'to make hot', which is the verb to heat. The participle form for the verb is heating, which is a gerund and an adjective.Examples:Verb: The weather is heating up.Noun: Heating is the only way to kill the bacteria.Adjective: The heating soup boiled over.Note: Some dictionaries show the word 'hotten' as a verb, but not many. The forms of that verb are: hotten, hottens, hottening, hottened.The weather is hottening up.Hottening is the only way to kill the bacteria.The hottening soup boiled over.
Sat is a past form. Sat is the past form of the verb sit.Sat is a past form. Sat is the past form of the verb sit.Sat is a past form. Sat is the past form of the verb sit.Sat is a past form. Sat is the past form of the verb sit.Sat is a past form. Sat is the past form of the verb sit.Sat is a past form. Sat is the past form of the verb sit.Sat is a past form. Sat is the past form of the verb sit.Sat is a past form. Sat is the past form of the verb sit.Sat is a past form. Sat is the past form of the verb sit.
"Have" can be both a verb (e.g., "I have a cat") and an auxiliary verb that helps form tenses (e.g., "I have eaten"). In the latter case, it is part of a verb phrase indicating a past action that is connected to the present.
Progressive verb form, also known as continuous verb form, is used to indicate actions that are ongoing or in progress. It is formed by combining a form of the verb "to be" with the present participle of the main verb (ending in -ing). For example, "I am talking" or "She is eating."
The verb form of intensity is intensify. As in "to intensify something".
Condemn is the verb form.
The verb form is tighten.
The verb form is perspire.