repute
Slander- Spoken false statement that damage another person's reputation.
Yes, convey is a verb.
"Signal" is the verb.
The verb of complaint is complain. As in "to complain to someone".
The verb for cooperation is cooperate. For example "to cooperate with someone".
"My reputation precedes me" is a sentence, i.e., it contains a subject and a verb.
The word 'reputation' is a noun; a word for the subjective opinions of others; a word for a concept; a word for a thing.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:His reputation was sullied after the affair with the maid. (subject of the sentence)We learned his reputation was the best in the business. (direct object of the verb 'learned')This movie is not as good as its reputation. (object of the preposition 'as')
"Reputation" is a noun. "Repute" is also a noun, while "to repute "is a verb. "Reputed" is an adjective whilst the adverbial form is "reputedly".
The word repute is a verb or a noun; the adjective form is reputed.
Fame, meaning widespread reputation, is usually a noun. It can be a verb when used with an object and is usually passive, as in, he was famed for his ruthlessness.
The question "What part of speech is reputation?" means that someone is interested in knowing the part of speech (noun, verb, pronoun, adjective, adverb, preposition, conjunction, interjection) for the word reputation. Reputation is a noun.
In the sentence, "Our work advanced the school's reputation", "Our" is a possessive case pronoun, "work" is a noun, "advanced" is a verb in its past tense, "the" is an article, "school's" is a noun in the possessive case, and "reputation" is a noun. "Our" and "school's" could alternatively be called "substantive adjectives."
Yes, caring is an action so it is a verb. Caring is also a noun and an adjective. Example uses:As a verb: I will be caring for my mom until she gets over the flu.As a noun: A little caring will have her back on her feed in no time.As an adjective: I have to live up to my reputation as the caring child.
The verb form of "disgrace" is "to disgrace," which means to bring shame or dishonor upon someone or something. It can refer to actions that lead to a loss of reputation or respect. For example, if someone is caught cheating, they may disgrace themselves and their family.
To stain or dirty, either a persons reputation or a material object. "The allegations he made besmirched her character" "The cloth had been besmirched by mud"
Othello
I have an assignment to search for a person has a good reputation.