transitive
The word devastating is an adjective and a verb. Example uses:Adjective: He received devastating injuries in the accident.Verb: The runoff from the factory was devastating the nearby wetlands.
The noun forms for the verb to devastate are devastator, devastation, and the gerund, devastating.
No, "devastating" is not a verb; it is an adjective. It describes something that causes severe emotional or physical harm or destruction. The verb form is "devastate," which means to cause extensive damage or destruction.
The adjective form of the verb "devastate" is "devastating". When we add -ing to the base form of a verb, it creates a present participle. One function of a present participle is an adjective -- a devastating storm.
Yes, type is a verb; type is also a noun.
The noun forms for the verb to devastate are devastator, devastation, and the gerund, devastating.
The verb devastate has the present participle devastating, which can be an adjective. Its related adverb is devastatingly.
Her is not any type of verb. It is a pronoun.
Triumph can be a verb and a noun.As a verb (often used with "over") -- Good triumphed over evil.As a noun -- After a devastating accident, David's one great triumph was learning to walk again.
The word 'devastating' is the present participle, present tense of the verb to devastate. The present participle of the verb is also a gerund, a verb form that can function as a noun. The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The noun form of the verb to devastate is devastation.
The devastating earthquake on Japan not only destroyed infrastructure, it also caused a tsunami that swept across Japan's east coast. devastating: a property of noun (in this quake, earthquake) derived from the verb 'to devastate'. Means: destructive, causing massive damage.
The word type is both a noun and a verb (type, types, typing, typed). Example uses: As a verb: I type on the computer. As a noun: What type of computer do you use? Verb and noun: First type the cells, then describe the types.