Yes, reign is a noun; reign is also a verb. Examples: Noun: The reign of Elizabeth I was forty five years. Verb: Margie has been selected to reign as queen of the winter ball.
Honour is already a verb when used in the right context. As in "to honour something or someone".Honours, honouring and honoured are also verbs.Some example sentences are:"I will honour this agreement"."He honours his queen"."I am honouring our guest"."We honoured the queen's command".
Delight is a noun and a verb. "The arrival of the Snow Queen filled him with delight." (noun) "I delight in the sweet sound of music." (verb)
Honored is an action verb. Hope I helped! :)
The verb forms of protection are protect, protects, protecting and protected. It depends on the tense.For example:"I will protect you"."He protects her"."He is protecting the queen"."She was protected".
Yes, the word 'queens' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'queen'; a word for a female monarch; a word for a person.The word 'queens' is also the third person, singular, present of the verb to queen.
it belongs to the verb to be (ser o estar)...e.g. El esinteligente
In English, there is no distinction between masculine, feminine and neuter. Noun and verb forms are neutral. Gender is shown by different forms or different words. The noun king is a male regent; the noun queen is a female regent.
There is no adjective form of queen. Not all words have noun forms verb forms or adjective forms some words are for example only nouns.
"Consort" is used as a verb to mean to keep company or associate with someone, especially in a royal context. For example, "The queen consorts with foreign dignitaries at official events."
The feminine of a bee is a worker bee. A male bee is a drone. All hives have one queen bee in charge.
The verb of informative is inform.Informs, informing and informed are also verbs.Example sentences:We will inform you of any changes.She informs him of the timetable change.We are informing customers what to do next.I have informed the commander.