Yes, it is the past tense and past participle of the verb ' to achieve.'
e.g. I have achieved my goal for the week.
As the participle, it can also be used as an adjective.
e.g. Achieved goals can be replaced by new ones.
Traveled is a main verb; it does have a meaning of its own and doesn't need to be supported by another verb.
Includes is a verb.
Construct is a verb.
Belong is a verb.
Disturb can be an adjective and a verb. Adjective: Causing distress. Verb: The present participle of the verb 'disturb'.
The word achieved is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb achieve.
Achieved is a past tense verb. The noun form is achievement.
Achieving is the present participle of achieve.
achieve is a verb. Its forms are achieve achieves achieved achieving
Yes, the word 'achieving', the gerund form of the verb to achieve, is an abstract noun, a word for an act of success or accomplishment through effort.
No, "successfully" is an adverb, not a verb. It is used to describe how something is done or achieved.
The verb of achievements is achieve.Other verbs are achieves, achieving and achieved.Some example sentences are:"I will achieve these set goals"."He achieves the required grade"."I am achieving this resolution"."He nearly achieved it".
The word "achieved" is primarily a mental verb, as it represents the accomplishment of a goal or the realization of a desired outcome, which are cognitive processes. While achieving a goal may involve physical actions, such as hard work or effort, the verb itself pertains more to the mental aspect of setting, pursuing, and attaining objectives.
The past tense is "achieved." (a verb's silent E is dropped when adding -ed)
No, it's an adverb and they do describe verbs but the word is not a verb itself.
A dynamic verb shows continued action on the part of the subject. Some example of dynamic verbs are achieved, consulted, approved, applied, managed, launched, defined, explored, and created.
The word 'possible' is an adjective, used to describe something that can be done or achieved.