To boil is: hervir. It is an e to ie stem changing verb.
burn scold boil
The verb phrase "boil the water" is transitive. Transitive verbs take a direct object. Boil is the verb, and water is the object. Transitive verbs phrases also have corresponding passive forms "The water is boiled."
An adverb, boil is the verb. Both boil and boils are verbs. Verbs are "doing " words, such as smile, lick, hunt, enjoy, kiss, drive, swim, dive and sink. Mary was told to boil the kettle. Mary often boils the kettle.
It depends on how you want to use it and who is doing it. However the verbs for "to boil" are hervir, which is to boil water, and cocer, which is to boil food. Let me know how you want to say it on my message board.
Explicit verbs are verbs which are unambiguous and leave no doubt as to what they mean.
It means the boil keeps returning.
I think you mean 'boil off' not 'off boil' and by this the recipe or person, etc, means to boil off something such as all of the oil in the foods so that it is not greasy when you get the result. ~Singer
You mean 'adjectives', which are describing words. Verbs are doing words.
I think you mean 'boil off' not 'off boil' and by this the recipe or person, etc, means to boil off something such as all of the oil in the foods so that it is not greasy when you get the result. ~Singer
Verbs like approve of confess to decide, are verbs used without objects.
I am not sure what you mean by 'special verbs'. You need to give examples or re ask your question. There are many kinds of verbs; be verbs, action verbs, state verbs, present participles, past participles, auxiliary verbs, etc The term 'special verbs' is not usually found in grammar books