"Illuminating" can be both a verb and an adjective. As a verb, it means to light up or illuminate something. As an adjective, it describes something that is bright, shining, or enlightening.
babab
Verb
'Alienate' is the verb form of the noun 'alien'.
The verb in the sentence is "is," which is a form of the verb "to be."
stay in - not go out stay on - not leave at the expected time stay on - remain in place, not come off stay up - not go to bed stay out - not return home
"Stayed up". ("Stay" is a regular verb.) Note: Only a minority of English grammarians consider that "up" is part of this verb; "up" is more often considered a predicate complement or an adverb. Verbs of this type, however, with separable prefixes, are common in German.
The present tense of the verb "stay" is "stay". For example, "I stay at home on weekends."
The verb stay is an action verb.
The phrasal verb for "remain" is "stay behind" or "stay put."
No, "stay" can be both a transitive verb (takes an object) and an intransitive verb (does not require an object). For example, "Stay here" is intransitive, while "Stay the course" is transitive.
The past is stayed.
No. Stay is a verb, and more rarely a noun. It cannot be a preposition.
(Linking verb) Please remain calm. (Action verb) The smell of their roses does not remain.
The past form is stayed so it is a regular verb.
The phrasal verb of "avoid" is "stay away from" or "steer clear of".
No. The verb stay means to remain. The noun stay can mean a visit, a rope, or a support (collar stay)