receive
Receive
cip- is from capio "I seize, I capture, I take in, I take on". Recipient is derived itself from the latin verb recipio (I receive).
"Is used" is a passive construction using the verb "is" as a helping verb, and "used" as the main verb. It indicates that the subject is the recipient of the action instead of the doer.
No, it is a ditransitive verb. In grammar, a ditransitive verb is a verb which takes a subject and two objects which refer to a theme and a recipient.
A direct object is defined as a noun phrase that is the recipient of the action verb.
I take this question to mean: what do you call that part of a sentence which receives the action of the verb? If the sentence is in the active voice, it is the object that receives the action of the verb: 'My mother was stroking her cat' ('her cat' is the object of the verb 'was stroking', and is also the recipient of the action of stroking). If the sentence is in the passive voice, it is the subject that receives the action of the verb: 'The cat was being stroked by my mother' ('the cat' is the subject of the verb 'was being stroked', and is also the recipient of the action of stroking).
A reflexive verb is a verb that is accompanied by a reflexive pronoun, indicating that the subject of the verb is also the recipient of the action. In other words, the subject performs the action on itself. Examples include "I wash myself" or "She dresses herself."
The likely word is heiress (female recipient of an inheritance).The similar word is the verb to harass (to bother or annoy).
Yes. It is the past tense of the verb deliver.
A transitive verb is the verb used when the subject of the sentence is the one doing the action; the direct object is the recipient of the action word. for example: The boy throws the ball. Throws is the verb and ball is the object.
Subject, verb, and object are the three core parts of a simple sentence. The subject is the person or thing that performs the action, the verb is the action itself, and the object is the recipient of the action.
In linguistics, the mediopassive voice is used to describe a construction where the subject of a verb is both the doer and the receiver of the action.