Yes
It can be, when it is a direction. An example is "we went up in a balloon." It can also be an adjective or preposition (up the tree), and colloquially a noun or verb.
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.
Yes, "Range" can be a verb. "The wild mustangs would range from the Rocky Mountains to the Missouri River." "Range" can also be a noun. "Mom put some water on the range to heat up."
verb
make up is verb and noun
Yes, "picked up" is a verb phrase formed by the verb "picked" and the adverb "up."
The phrase "wake up" is a verb (e.g., "They will wake up the parrots early", or "They will wake them up early"). It's called a "particle verb" ("up" is the particle) or sometimes a "phrasal verb" (since it is not a single word).
The term 'wait up' is a verb (wait) and adverb(up) combination.
explodeBlow up is a verb it is a phrasal verb.
Got up. Get up is a phrasal verb it has a verb + a preposition. To make the past tense the tenses of the verb changes the preposition does not change.
Accelerate is already a verb. For example, "to accelerate something" is an action and therefore a verb. Another verb would be speed. "To speed something up".
No. Up is a preposition.But up can be used with a verb to form a phrasal verb for example: look up, get up, break up. These verbs are action verbs.In phrasal verbs both words act as one.
Followed up. Follow is the verb in this phrasal verb and only the verb changes with tense change. Follow is a regular verb so the past participle is +ed = followed.
No. A phrasal verb is made up of a verb - usually an action verb - plus a preposition or an adverb eg look out grow up stand up put off put down
"Rouse" is a verb, which means to wake someone from sleep or to stir up feelings or excitement. It is not an adverb.
The past tense of the verb "to light up" is "lit up" or "lighted up."