noun - You must hand your project in before the end of the week
verb - We will project the power point onto the wall.
He was able to project the picture onto the wall. They used the bullhorn to project the sound through the crowd.
"Catch" can be either a noun or a verb. Example as a noun: "That suitcase has a broken catch." Example as a verb, "If an outfielder catches a fly ball in baseball, the batter is out."
One example. jonh also brought candies to school
"Wrong" can be a verb, an adjective, or a noun. An example of its use as a verb is "They wrong their political enemies by always describing them as motivated by greed."
"Amiss" is an adverb. It describes how the verb/action in the sentence was performed. It should be used after the verb. Example: "I was really just wandering amiss." Here, 'wandering' is the verb and amiss describes how I was wondering.
You use we'll in a sentence as the subject and helping verb since it is a contraction. For example: We'll work on the project tonight.
He was able to project the picture onto the wall. They used the bullhorn to project the sound through the crowd.
He needed to project his voice more if everyone at the back of the room were going to hear him properly.
verbs
"I did my homework." -- that is an example
Example: Worrying never does anyone any good.
The staff learned how to project a more positive image of the company. She projects an air of calm self-confidence.
use abstain in a sentence
Yes, "crashed" is a verb, depending on how you use! Example: this is an adjective ( The " crashed" car looked very dirty). Example: This a verb ( The car "crashed " into the wall).
Camp, depending on the use of the word, is already a verb. For example, "to camp somewhere" is an action and therefore a verb.
A verb is an action word. For example, in the sentence: "I ran down the street", ran would be the verb.
As a verb. Example: I await your arrival.