The noun forms of the verb to bury are burial and the gerund, burying.
The noun form of to bury is burial. Burying can also used as a noun, but is more specifically a gerund.
The abstract noun for bury is burial.
Am/is/are + burying (present participle).I am buryingWe are buryingYou are buryingHe/she is buryingThey are burying
The possessive form for the noun mummy is mummy's.The movie is called 'The Mummy's Revenge'.
The present tense for "bury" is "buries" for third person singular (he/she/it), and "bury" for all other subjects (I, you, we, they).
Bury is a verb and not a noun. The correponding noun is burial, the plural form of which is burials.
The noun forms of the verb to bury are burial and the gerund, burying, both are concrete nouns as words for a physical action.The noun 'burial' is an abstract noun as a word for a ceremony surrounding a formal interment of a body.
The noun form of to bury is burial. Burying can also used as a noun, but is more specifically a gerund.
The word 'interment' is a noun form, a word for the burial of a body.
The abstract noun for bury is burial.
No, bury is not an noun, it is a verb, an action word.
Yes, it is a noun. It is related to the verb "to bury" and the adjective "buried."
Berry is a noun, not a verb. Bury is a verb
No, "burial" is a noun. The word "bury" is a verb.
No, the word 'buried' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to bury. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:These flower bulbs should be buried no more than six inches. (verb)Long John Silver kept his treasure in a buried chest. (adjective)The noun form of the verb to bury is the gerund, burying.
Am/is/are + burying (present participle).I am buryingWe are buryingYou are buryingHe/she is buryingThey are burying
The noun form for the adjective horrible is horribleness.