"You want to forgive" actually has two verbs, want and forgive.
"Forgive" can be both a verb (e.g., "I forgive you for what you did") and a noun (e.g., "Give me your forgiveness") depending on how it is used in a sentence.
It can be. It can also be a noun. It can be. "I want to hunt deer." In that sentence it is a verb. "I want to go on a hunt." In that sentence, it is a noun.
It is a present tense irregular verb. BUT the sentence is a past simple sentence the didn't (did not) tells us the sentence is past.
Forgiver and forgiveness are nouns for the verb forgive.
Forgiver and forgiveness are nouns for the verb forgive.
Want is a verb.
The verb is "perdoar". And you would say "forgive me" as "perdoa-me".
I want a sentence that has 5 words exactly in it.
Eventually you would have to forgive someone if you don't want to hold a grudge.
Assuming you mean "perdon", then "perdone" is (verb) forgive. "Perdon" is forgive.
The abstract noun forms of the verb to forgive are forgiveness and the gerund, forgiving.
Yes. An example sentence: She didn't want Joseph to bleed on her.