It sure is! Get out and go for a canoe! "Canoe" is a noun when it refers to the boat itself, and a verb when it refers to the action of using the boat - which is also often referred to as "canoeing"
Bear in mind that a sentence fragment is not a sentence, so your question is itself not correctly phrased. "The canoe with the blue stripes" is a sentence fragment, a noun phrase with no verb. The phrase is the subject or the object of a sentence, but it isn't a sentence. Samples of the completed sentence with the subject and the verb in bold:Subject: The canoe with the blue stripesis Mr. Jones' canoe.Object of the verb: I rentedthe canoe with the blue stripes.Object of a preposition: I saw him in the canoe with the blue stripes.
It is a verb. It describes the action of paddling a canoe.
Pagayer is a French equivalent of the English phrase "to paddle the canoe."Specifically, the French word is a verb. The verb is in the present form of the infinitive. The pronunciation will be "pah-ghey-yey" in French.
"The canoe with the blue stripes" is the fragment, a noun phrase with no verb. The phrase is the subject or the object of a sentence, but it isn't a sentence. Samples of the completed sentence with the subject and the verb in bold:Subject: The canoe with the blue stripes isMr. Jones' canoe.Object of the verb: I rented the canoe with the blue stripes.Object of a preposition: I saw him in the canoe with the blue stripes.The following are complete sentences, the subject and the verb in bold:The truth can be unpleasant.The rams locked horns and the tourists watchedthem from far away.The dancer floated across the stage.
a spirit canoe is an invisible canoe. neigther the canoe of a spirit or the spirit of a canoe.
The anagram of the word 'ocean' is canoe.
donno
you use a canoe by goin in it
outrigger canoe
A canoe provides good exercise.
Tagalog word of canoe: bangka
The force of the person/people who are in the canoe that's why we use paddles in a canoe or paddle boats.