Yes,
as in "I complained about the man"
"I" is the subject,
"complained" is the verb (because I am doing it)
"man" is the object
Complain is a regular verb, so both forms are complained.
No, the word "complain" is not an adverb.The word "complain" is a verb.The adverb form of the word would be complainingly.
A sentence with a subject, intransitive verb, and an adverb is:Lorelei complained bitterly.
The verb of complaint is complain.Complains, complaining and complained are also verbs.Here are some sentence examples:"I want to complain to the manager"."She complains about the sock she found in her soup"."The manager had no idea why she was complaining, the sock added flavour"."The manager told the chef that the lady complained about his speciality sweaty foot soup".
" The boy complained about having to use complained in a sentence."
The past tense of "complain" is "complained."
The past perfect tense is created with the auxiliary verb had and a past participle. The past perfect tense of complain is had complained. The past perfect progressive tense is created with had + been + a present participle. The past perfect progressive of complain is had been complaining.
No, he was not. Anyway not that he complained.
ravi
rudly
complained
To 'complain' means to express feeling of dissatisfaction towards a particular thing, idea, or person. Complaint is the verb form of 'complain', and is usually used something like - 'Miss. A filed a complaint against Mr. X for wrong behavior at a public place.' 'Complained' is the past participle of 'complain' - example: 'Austin complained about Mark's notorious act last night'.