The verb of addition is "add."
No its a noun
The Latin verb addere, leading to the participle additio and thence addition.
The verb of addition is add.Other verbs are adds, adding and added.Some examples are:"I will add the spices now"."He adds some fluid to the car"."I am adding these finances up"."He added too much chilli".
The noun forms for the verb to add are addition, additive, and the gerund, adding.
We're missing a verb there. The answer in an addition problem is the sum. The answer in a subtraction problem is the difference. The answer in a multiplication problem is the product. The answer in a division problem is the quotient.
add
No its a noun
The Latin verb addere, leading to the participle additio and thence addition.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is a noun related to the verb to add.
It's a verb, a compound verb made from the infinitive stem "be" and the auxiliary "can". In addition, "Can be" can be a helping verb phrase, e.g. "Tom can be helping the younger kids". Can be is helping the verb helping.
The verb of addition is add.Other verbs are adds, adding and added.Some examples are:"I will add the spices now"."He adds some fluid to the car"."I am adding these finances up"."He added too much chilli".
The word additional is an adjective. It is a supplement.
A camouflaged verb is a verb that has been changed into an adjective or noun by adding ance, ant, ence, ency, ent, ion, ing, et cetera. A camouflaged verb requires the addition of another verb to complete the sentence.
The simple present tense follows this structure/formula: Subject + Verb For example: I sing. For negative sentences, there is an addition of an auxiliary verb: Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Do" + Verb For example: I do not like him.
The addition of a simple suffix will change your verb into a noun.
The noun forms for the verb to add are addition, additive, and the gerund, adding.
No. Also is an adverb. It means "in addition." It can also (arguably) function as a conjunction without "and."