The verb for obedient is obey.
Other verbs are obeys, obeying and obeyed.
Some examples are:
"You will obey my orders".
"He obeys his master".
"Obeying his commander, he shoots".
"I obeyed my orders".
The root, or verb for obedient is 'obey'.
No, "obedient" is an adjective that describes someone who follows rules or instructions willingly.
It is a noun. Obedient is an adjective, and obey is a verb.
Obedient(The verb to obey also has the participle adjective obeyed.)
The verb for obedient is obey.Other verbs are obeys, obeying and obeyed.Some examples are:"You will obey my orders"."He obeys his master"."Obeying his commander, he shoots"."I obeyed my orders".
Obey is one verb for obedient.Some other verbs are obeys, obeying and obeyed.
The verb is merely, obey. I obey, you obey, he, she, it obeys. One may be obedient to someone, but one does not "obey to" someone.
Comparative: more obedient Superlative: most obedient
The superlative form of "obedient" is "most obedient."
obey is a verb, not adjective. However if you are looking for a word that describes a person who obeys easily, then that word is obedient.
The verb for obedient is obey.Other verbs are obeys, obeying and obeyed.Some examples are:"You will obey my orders"."He obeys his master"."Obeying his commander, he shoots"."I obeyed my orders".
The comparative form of obedient is "more obedient."