Trip is already a verb.
Other verbs depending on the tense are trips, tripping, and tripped.
Some example sentences are:
"I saw him trip in the step".
"She trips on her shoelace".
"There was nothing we could do to stop him tripping on the wet steps".
"He tripped in the street".
Trip is a verb.
I believe that the verb is "camping trip." A verb is an action word, so if it's not that, then I have no idea!
Trip and run are both being used as verbs.Willis also a verb. It is an auxiliary verb. With the main verb run - will run- it expresses future tense.
tiripi(loan) (noun) trip. orrapahuki(verb) (-na) to trip up.
No its a verb.
The verb in the sentence is are taking.
No. In most cases, like "He tripped," it's a past tense verb. It can also be used as an adjective, notably in "a tripped breaker."
The word "junket" can function as a noun or a verb. As a noun, it refers to a trip or excursion, often for pleasure or entertainment. As a verb, it means to go on a trip or excursion, usually for pleasure or business.
"No time for another shopping trip" is a fragment.There's no verb!
The word 'trip' is both a noun (trip, trips) and a verb (trip, trips, tripping, tripped).Example sentences:noun: The trip to the Grand Canyon was wonderful.verb: Someone can trip on that loose piece of carpeting.
went
To stop him getting away she tried to trip him.
The word trip is both a verb and a noun.The noun trip (trips) is a word for:a journey;a stumble and fall;a mistake;a light, nimble step;a hallucination or a stimulating experience (slang);a word for a thing.The verb trip (trips, tripping, tripped) is to catch one's foot on something causing one to stumble or fall; a word for an action.The noun forms for the verb to trip are tripper, and the gerund, tripping.