The verb of enjoyable is enjoy.
Other verbs are enjoys, enjoying and enjoyed.
Some example sentences are:
"I enjoy ice cream".
"She enjoys Nutella spread on toast".
"I am enjoying this music".
"I enjoyed the film last night".
Enjoyment.
No, the word enjoyed is the past participle, past tense of the verb to enjoy.The noun forms for the verb are enjoyer, enjoyment, and the gerund, enjoying.
The abstract noun forms of the verb 'to enjoy' are enjoyment, and the gerund, enjoying.
No, it is not. It is a noun form of the verb to enjoy.
The verb of enjoyment is enjoy.Other verbs depending on the tense are enjoys, enjoying and enjoyed.Some example sentences for you are:"I enjoy tea"."Scott enjoys Earl Grey tea"."Scott is enjoying an Earl Grey tea""He also enjoyed a tea earlier on".
The noun forms of the verb to enjoy are enjoyment and the gerund, enjoying. The noun 'enjoyment' is the third person, singular; a word for the thing spoken about.
Yes
The noun forms for the verb to enjoy are enjoyer, enjoyment, and the gerund, enjoying.
The word enjoyment is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun. Example sentence: After working hard all week, everyone needs some enjoyment. The verb form is to enjoy (enjoys, enjoying, enjoyed).
Subject is 'They'. Predicate is 'rode'. Verb is an action verb with 'surf' as the direct object. The sentence might answer any of a number of questions.
The verb of enjoyment is enjoy.Other verbs depending on the tense are enjoys, enjoying and enjoyed.Some example sentences for you are:"I enjoy tea"."Scott enjoys Earl Grey tea"."Scott is enjoying an Earl Grey tea""He also enjoyed a tea earlier on".
The word 'enjoy' is not a noun. The word enjoy is a verb: enjoy, enjoys, enjoying, enjoyed.The noun form for the verb to enjoy is enjoyment.