Yes, it is a form of the verb "to rearrange" (change order or arrangement).
It is the past tense and past participle of the verb, and can also be used as an adjective.
No, it is a verb.
The verb "listen" becomes the past tense "listened" when rearranged.
The verb "read" becomes its own past tense when rearranged to "dare."
e r a
The rearranged word would be vent - a noun which means an oepning which allows gas or liquid to pass into or out of a confined space.
"waits" can be rearranged into "twais" or "saitw."
The letters seomu spell mouse when rearranged.
If Advises Mil is rearranged what would it be ?
The answer is debris when brides is rearranged.
atoms, are rearranged during a chemical change.
A sentence is considered inverted if the typical subject-verb-object order is rearranged, often placing the verb or auxiliary verb before the subject. Common examples include questions (e.g., "Are you coming?") and sentences that begin with adverbs or phrases (e.g., "In the garden sat a cat"). Inversions can also occur for emphasis or stylistic reasons. If the subject follows the verb, it is likely an inverted sentence.
You have franc + ₣.