The word 'complicated' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to complicate. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective.The noun form for the adjective complicated is complicatedness.The noun forms for the verb to complicate are complication and the gerund, complicating.
No, the word complicate is a verb; to complicate is to make more difficult, confusing, or more complex. The adjective form is the past participle of the verb, complicated (a complicated situation).
The difference between complex and complicated is that 'complex' refers to many different components, whereas "complicated" refers to a high level of difficulty.
verb.
Yes, an action verb.
Complicated is a verb or an adjective, depending on use.
The word 'complicated' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to complicate. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective.The noun form for the adjective complicated is complicatedness.The noun forms for the verb to complicate are complication and the gerund, complicating.
No, the word complicate is a verb; to complicate is to make more difficult, confusing, or more complex. The adjective form is the past participle of the verb, complicated (a complicated situation).
Complicate, complicated is the past tense form and the past participle form. Be quiet you will just complicate the situation His life was complicated by her laziness.
Yes,it can be (e.g. a complicated machine, a complicated situation). The word complicated is from the verb, to complicate, meaning to make more complex. It is the past tense and past participle and can be used as an adjective meaning complex or involved.
It is a pronoun. Not using the word 'it' makes things very complicated.
The word envy is both a noun and a verb; for example: Noun: Envy can keep you from your own goals or spur you toward them. Verb: I don't envy rich people, their lives can be very complicated.
The word 'complicated' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to complicate. The past participle of the verb also acts as an adjective.The present participle of the verb, complicating, acts as an adjective.The noun forms for the verb to complicate are complication and the gerund, complicating.There is no adverb form of the verb to complicate.Example sentences:No one believed his complicated excuse. (adjective)We have some complicating issues to resolve. (adjective)A technician found a complication with the wiring. (noun)Our teacher loves complicating simple questions. (noun)
The government is complicated-apex
bifurcated complicated disintegrated fulminated .. try any verb ending in "ate"
No the word complicated is not a noun. It is an adjective and a verb.
No. If one is to say "something is getting larger", getting would be the verb, not larger. The root term large as a verb would be enlarge.No, it's a comparative adjective. Formed from the adjective large. To form comparative adjectives you add -ed to adjectives with one syllable or you use more for adjectives with two or more syllables.big - bigger, large - largerinteresting - more interesting, complicated - more complicated.Also you use than: larger than, more complicated thanTheir house is larger than ours.This test is more complicated than I thought.