"declared" is the past tense of the verb "to declare".
Yes, it is a verb. It is something you are doing.
yes part of the verb "to be" I am he is she is it is you are we are they are
It is a helping verb.
May is a linking verb, not an action verb.
'are' is part of the infinitive verb 'to be.' (i am, you are, he/she is, we are, they are). Yes, 'are' could be classed as a verb
Should is an auxiliary (helping) verb.
No, declared is a past tense verb.
Said can be an adjective, but is rarely used that way, It is the past participle of the verb to say.(e.g. Things said cannot be unsaid.)-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Other participles that can be used as adjectives meaning "said" are: spoken, suggested, uttered, affirmed, proffered, iterated, or confirmed.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is an adjective, the negative of the past participle (declared) of the verb to declare.
The word 'declarence' is not a word in English.There is the abstract noun declaration.There is the verb to declare (declares, declaring, declared).There are the adjectives declarable and declared.
The word declare is a verb. The past tense is declared.
The word 'assertion' is a noun, a word for something declared or stated positively, often without proof; a declaration; a claim; a word for a thing.The word 'assertion' is the noun form of the verb to assert.
declared, but without proof to judge some one without having proof
no not declared'
no it was declared from Boston Massachusetts or somewhere in the 13 colonies no, i believe it was declared in Rhode Island or Pensylvania, and it was declared AGAINST England.
they declared Independence from the British
A guy declared it.
The results were declared on 17th June. Also the secondary results were declared in November.