Grave is a noun or an adjective not a verb
In modern English, grave is not normally used as a verb, but can be a noun, a noun adjunct (grave marker), or an adjective meaning serious.The transitive verb grave is identical to engrave. But this is nearly an archaic usage. It has an old nautical use meaning to clean and coat a wooden hull with pitch.Examples:"It takes time to grave (engrave) a tombstone.""In the drydock, the workers began to grave the keel of the old French ship."
The word buried is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb bury.
For the noun form: It was odd seeing a grave in my friends backyard. for the verb: When the man broke up with is girlfriend his face looked very grave.
No, the word 'gravely' is an adverb, a word used to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.Example: The CEO spoke gravely of the future of the company.The word 'gravely' is the adverb form of the adjective 'grave'.The noun form of the adjective 'grave' is graveness.The word 'grave' is also a noun form, a word for a place of burial for a dead body; a word for a thing.The word 'grave' is also an obsolete verb meaning to carve or sculpt. Many people are familiar with the term from the Bible, 'a graven image'. The word 'graven' is the past participle of the verb to grave, functioning as an adjective to describe the noun 'image'.
The verb of length is lengthen.Others, depending on the tense, are lengthens, lengthening and lengthened.Some example sentences are:"We will lengthen the road"."She lengthens her hair"."We are lengthening the deadline"."The ghostly arm lengthened towards the grave".
There is no homophone to grave
Grave
After death of people, grave become necessary.For this necessary purpose people can use grave digger. A grave digger digs grave for the death person.
After death of people, grave become necessary.For this necessary purpose people can use grave digger. A grave digger digs grave for the death person.
you plant a grave buster on the grave and it will destroy it in a few seconds, but a zombie can destroy the grave buster when it's planted on the grave so you should put something in front of the grave buster when it is destroying a grave. hope it helped :D
if you mean grave is in where the dead rest its : tumba if you mean grave as in "shes grave danger" its : grave but you say the "a" like "ahh" and you say the "e" like "eh"
One of the meanings of "grave" is "serious."From Dictionary.com:1. serious or solemn; sober: a grave person; grave thoughts.2. weighty, momentous, or important: grave responsibilities.3. threatening a seriously bad outcome or involving serious issues; critical: a grave situation; a grave illness.A grave offense is a serious offense.