Plan is a noun in that sentence.
It is a possessive noun. It tells us the plan belongs to God
Planned is a verb. It's the past tense of plan.
Planned is a verb. It's the past tense of plan.
Here stop is a verb. verb + to + verb - plan + to + stop
A preposition.
Plans is a noun (plural form of plan) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of plan).
Smart Ones is part of the Weight Watchers plan. Substituting their food for your typical meals can be a very effective form of weight control if you are able to stick to it.
In grammar, a "draft" refers to a preliminary version or plan of a written document or speech. It can also refer to the act of pulling or drawing in a particular direction.
Fourteen points
None of them were. On June 19, the day after Hamilton's infamous speech, Madison mercilessly tore apart the New Jersey plan and said nothing about Hamilton's plan, which sent it to oblivion.
TO contrive, plan, or elaborate; invent from existing principles or ideas: to devise a method.
"Plan" is a verb and a noun. A verb shows action, so plan is a verb in the case of using action. Example: "I plan to go to the beach on Wednesday." A noun is a person, place, or thing, so plan is also be able to used as a thing. Example: "My plan to the beach got cancelled."