Medicate could be a verb for medicine. And, depending on the tense, medicates, medicating and medicated.
Treat, as in "to treat someone" could also be a related verb. As are treats, treating and treated, again depending on the tense.
no its a verb
The verb of medicine is medicate. As in the action "to medicate someone".
The verb is affect. The medicine affects my heart rate. The new regulations affect our school.
The direct object of the verb 'take' is medicine; Uncle John is the indirect object (take medicine to Uncle John).
She considers him a friend. They appointed him captain. He painted the wall a vibrant red. The judge declared the defendant innocent. We chose him as our leader.
Founder can be a noun or a verb. Noun: "Louis Pasteur is sometimes considered the founder of modern medicine." Verb: "We were far from shore, and the ship had begun to founder."
It is spelled does, third person, singular, present of the verb to do (does, doing, did, done). Example:He does the best he can. She does appreciate his effort.The word does is also the plural form for the noun doe, a female deer.Dose is a noun meaning a portion of medicine and a verb meaning to administer a portion of medicine.
"Does" is a form of the verb "to do" used in present simple tense for he/she/it. For example, "He does his homework every day." "Dose" refers to a specified amount of medication prescribed to be taken at one time, such as a pill or a measured quantity of liquid, like a teaspoon of cough syrup.
FULGURATION: verb (used without object)1.to flash or dart like lightning. verb (used with object)2.Medicine/Medical . to destroy (especially an abnormalgrowth) by electricity.
The word is "alleviate."
The auxiliary verb "have" creates the perfect tenses and is used with the past participle of a verb. The word not is an adverb used to express the negative. It is used between the auxiliary verb and the verb.Example:Verb take, past tense took, past participle taken -Past Perfect : "He had taken the money from the safe."Past Perfect : "He had not taken the money from the safe."The continuous tenses use the present participle(-ing) form -Past perfect continuous : "He had been taking his medicine."Past perfect continuous : "He had not been taking his medicine."
No, clamored is the past tense of the verb clamor, which means to become loudly insistent or to proclaim insistently.