The verb for mass is amass.
Amasses, amassing and amassed are also some verbs.
All objects have mass. The assignment was to calculate the mass of the object. Depending on the context, mass can be used as a noun, adjective, or verb.
The word mass can be used in physics, as a verb, or as a religious rite.As a noun: "We determined that the mass of the apple was 30 grams."As a verb: "He expected the enemy's forces to mass near the river crossing."As a noun: "They held a funeral mass for the victims of the tornado."As an adjective: "We must also consider the role of the mass media in society today."
Yes, it can be, to mean on a great scale (mass communication, mass transportation, mass destruction). Otherwise, mass is a verb (to amass or gather together) or a noun (quantity of matter or material, an abnormal cell growth, or a religious service).
The word 'billow' is both a noun (billow, billows) and a verb (billow, billows, billowing, billowed).The noun billow is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a large undulating mass, such as a cloud, smoke, or steam; a rolling mass like a high wave; a word for a thing.The verb to billow is to to fill with air and swell outward; to rise or roll in waves.
No, it is a noun. It may refer to the mass center of an atom, or to the structure at the center of many living cells.
All objects have mass. The assignment was to calculate the mass of the object. Depending on the context, mass can be used as a noun, adjective, or verb.
"go"- verb "to go" = ir (irregular verb) "to" in the sense of place = à "mass"= missa Go to mass. = Ir à missa. Let's go to mass. = Vamos à missa. I go to mass. = Eu vou à missa.
The word mass can be used in physics, as a verb, or as a religious rite.As a noun: "We determined that the mass of the apple was 30 grams."As a verb: "He expected the enemy's forces to mass near the river crossing."As a noun: "They held a funeral mass for the victims of the tornado."As an adjective: "We must also consider the role of the mass media in society today."
Yes, it can be, to mean on a great scale (mass communication, mass transportation, mass destruction). Otherwise, mass is a verb (to amass or gather together) or a noun (quantity of matter or material, an abnormal cell growth, or a religious service).
Destroy is a verb. The corresponding noun is destruction, which is a mass noun and has no plural form.
No, it is a verb (to measure mass or weight). The past participle (weighed) might be used as an adjective.
The word 'billow' is both a noun (billow, billows) and a verb (billow, billows, billowing, billowed).The noun billow is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a large undulating mass, such as a cloud, smoke, or steam; a rolling mass like a high wave; a word for a thing.The verb to billow is to to fill with air and swell outward; to rise or roll in waves.
No, it is a noun. It may refer to the mass center of an atom, or to the structure at the center of many living cells.
Adoring is the gerundive form of the verb: to adore. It has no mass. Furthermore, there is no such verb as "to much": you cannot be muching. Please check your spelling and resubmit the question.
The word 'squish' is both a verb and a noun.The verb 'squish' means to squeeze or crush together or into a flat mass; to walk through mud or mire.The noun 'squish' is a word for the sound of something being squeezed or the sound of walking in mud.
Yes, the word 'aggregate' is a noun and a verb, and also an adjective.The noun aggregate is a word for a collection or sum of units or parts; mineral materials, such as sand or stone, used in making concrete.The verb to aggregate means to to collect or gather into a mass or whole; to amount to.The adjective aggregate describes a noun as formed by the collection of units or particles into one mass or sum.
The verb form of "sermon" is "preach." It means to deliver a religious or moral discourse to an audience, typically in a formal setting such as a church or synagogue.