There is no verb of knee but there is a verb or verbs for knee e.g.bendtwistThe verb "knee" has long been used and means to kick someone with your knee.
There is no verb of knee but there is a verb or verbs for knee e.g.bendtwistThe verb "knee" has long been used and means to kick someone with your knee.
My knee is hurting; I fell off a cliff. I have a knee fetish - I can't help it I was walking through an Iraqi village, but couldn't help noticing that one woman had one knee showing, and was following me: how unorthodox. I've come from Alabama with a banjo on my knee. When I'm gardening, I kneel on my right knee the most. I have rheumatism in my knee. I can touch my knee with my shoulder. Any of the above could be appropriate sentences including the word 'knee'. I hope you find one is useful for whatever purpose you had in mind.
Knee can be a verb.If he attacks knee him in the groin.
Knee is a regular verb so both past and past participle are knee + ed kneed
The word "knead" (pronounced need) means to work the bread dough.Another homophone for need and knead is the word "kneed" (from verb to knee, also an adjective).
bend
No, the compound word 'knee-deep' is an adjective and an adverb.Examples:We trudged through the knee-deep snow. (adjective, describes the noun 'snow')We were swamped knee-deep in a barrage of complaints. (adverb, modifies the verb 'were swamped')
Knee is monosyllabic.
No, the word 'bruised' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to bruise. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:The girl was crying because she had bruised her knee on a rock. (verb)The bruised apples were in a box for half price. (adjective)The word 'bruise' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'bruise' is a word for a mark that develops from something hitting flesh.
Ouch, my knee hurts.
Ice is a noun (Put ice on your swollen knee) and a verb (Ice your swollen knee).