The verb of recognition is recognise.
Other verbs are recognises, recognising and recognised, depending on the tense.
Some example sentences are:
"I recognise you from somewhere".
"She recognises the man from the television".
"I am not good at recognising people".
"The murderer knew he was recognised".
The verb form is recognise (or recognize in US English)
Recognise -- it is a regular verb so the past is recognised
The abstract noun forms for the verb recognize are recognition and the gerund, recognizing.
Recognition is a noun and doesn't have any tenses. The verb form is recognize, and the past tense is recognized.
The word "reward" can function as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to something given in recognition of service or achievement. As a verb, it means to give something in recognition of one's efforts or actions.
The noun form for the verb to recognise (or recognize) is recognition and the gerund, recognizing.
The noun forms for the verb to recognize are recognition, and the gerund, recognizing.
The noun forms for the verb to recognize are recognition, and the gerund, recognizing.
Yes, it is. It comes from the verb "to recognize" (British spelling: to recognise).
The word "renown" can be either a noun or a verb. As a noun, it means fame or recognition, while as a verb, it means to be widely known or celebrated.
The correct verb is 'seems' which refers to the subject 'spirit': spirit seems.
Face is a noun and a verb. VERB: "Please face the wall." NOUN: "I saw her face." (it can act as a 'noun adjunct' with other nouns, as in 'face cream' and 'face recognition')