fall / falls / falling
No, it is not. The word fall is a verb (to fall, to plummet, to descend, to hang) or a noun (a fall, a drop, or as a synonym for the season of autumn). *As a season, it might be considered an adjective used with other nouns (e.g. fall weather, fall fashions) but it is more closely an attributive noun.
"Plummeting" is a verb form, specifically the present participle form of the verb "plummet," which means to fall or drop quickly and suddenly.
Dropping is the correct spelling of the present participle of the verb "drop" (to fall).
"Now" is a time expression used in a present form of a verb, indicating the action is currently happening.
No its a verb.
the word drip is a verb and you have to use like " I Dripped, You drip, it dripped, its dripping"..etc.
"Present" can be a verb, a noun, or an adjective. As a verb, it refers to presenting something. As a noun, it refers to the current time or a gift. As an adjective, it describes something that is currently in a particular place or situation.
Present tense plural is just the base form of the verb, no -s. argue. They (plural) argue all the time. She (singular) argues all the time.
The word 'going' is both a verb and a noun.The word 'going' is the present participle, present tense of the verb 'to go'.The present participle of the verb is called a gerund, a form that functions as a noun in sentence.Examples:We are going to see a movie. (verb)His going caused sadness for the staff. (noun)
Infinitive: fall Past: fell Past participle: fallen
Can is the present tense.
The phrase - is discussed - is a be verb (is) plus a past participle (discussed).That makes this a passive verb phrase, and because the be verb is present tense it is a present passive verbphrase.Money is discussed very lunch time.