Basically verbs indicate past, present or future time.
Active
This is done by active verbs.
Verb 2. A Verb is an action word, a 'doing' word.
It is an action verb.
The verb in this sentence is "passed". The verb "to pass" in the past. Quickly is the adverb 'cause it is describing how the time passed. Remember the verb is the action and the adverb describes the action.
Time is most often a noun, but it can be a verb (action word) in the sense of "I timed the race very accurately." Time can also be used as an adjective.
"Spend" is the action verb. Time is the direct object. You are doing what to the time? You are spending it. This makes "spend" the verb. :)
Strictly speaking the tense of a verb indicates time, when an action or state of being took place. It will show whether the action is finished or continuing, in the past, at the present or in the future. well, if its past tense, then it already happened, indicating the past. past is time. ANWSER;A. Time
The indicative mood shows that the action or state expressed by the verb is presented as a factWe went home early this evening
grew. A verb is an action
began is an action verb, not a linking verb.
You are not combining words. The suffix -tion (-ion, -sion) is used to change a verb to a noun that is the action indicated by the verb. For example the verb to communicate, communication is the act of communicating.The -tion form of to imagine is imagination, the art or act of imagining.