Its eager.
No, 'To Eager' is not a recognized verb. It can, however, be used as an adjective, 'Eager', or adverbially, 'Eagerly'.
Eager is an adjective, the noun is eagerness, there is no verb.
The past tense of "eager" is "eagered" but can also be "eagered for" or "was eager".
To use "eager" in the past tense, you would say "I was eager" or "he/she/they were eager." "Eager" remains the same in its base form in past tense, and you just need to add the appropriate form of the verb "to be" before it.
Debra K. Marquart has written: 'Everything's a verb' 'The hunger bone' -- subject(s): Rock musicians, Fiction 'From sweetness'
No, "spouse" is not a verb. It is a noun used to refer to a person's husband or wife.
Actually, 'How eager she was to do her best.' is a complete sentence, a complete thought. The subject is 'she', the verb is 'was', the word 'how' is an adverb describing the intensity of the predicate adjective 'eager'. The subject and predicate is another way of saying, 'She was so eager to do her best.'
The verb form of "house" is "to house," meaning to provide shelter or accommodation for something or someone.
There is no verb in "in the house?". "in the house?" is a prepositional phrase, consisting of a preposition, an indefinite article, and a noun. Since it doesn't have a verb, it isn't even a sentence at all.
The complete predicate is "owned a house" and the verb is "owned."
(verb) husband, male, man.
No. house can be a noun or a verb or an adjective