The verb for wide is widen.
Other verbs are widens, widening and widened, depending on the tense.
Some example sentences are:
"We will widen the road".
"The baby widens her mouth for the spoonful of yoghurt".
"We are widening the bike path".
"They have widened the doorway".
No wide is an adjective. Although widen is in fact a verb
The noun form for the adjective 'wide' is wideness; the verb is to widen.
The word 'wide' is an adjective.The word 'wide' is an adverb.Another adverb form is widely.The noun form is wideness.The verb form is to widen.
Wide is not a verb, so it does not have a past tense. Widened may be what you are looking for, as it is the past tense of the verb widen.
It is neither. It is a noun (dimension nouns are length, width, and breadth, or depth).The verb form is to widen (make wide or wider), and the adjective is wide.
provided
No, since 'wider' is comparative form of adverb 'wide'. But, there is verb 'widen'.
No, "narrowed" is a past tense verb form of the verb "narrow."
Yes, wide is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as more than average width; for example a wide shoe or a widerefrigerator.The word wide is also an adverb, a word that modifies a verb; for example 'Open wide.'
Stare is a noun (a blank stare) and a verb (to stare).
The verb "gape" means to look or stare with a look of wonder, amazement or surprise, generally with one's mouth open. It can also mean to open one's mouth wide.
Some opposites of the word 'narrow' as an adjective are: wide, broad, or thick.Opposites as a verb are broaden or widen.