The verb of belief is believe.
Some other verbs, which depend on the tense, are believes, believing and believed.
Here are some examples of each of those for you:
"I believe in Santa".
"She believes fairies are real".
"I have a hard time believing you".
"We all believed you and you tricked us".
The verb forms for the noun belief are believe, believes, believing, believed.
The abstract noun form of the verb believe is the gerund, believing.A related abstract noun form is belief.
No, "abjure" is not a noun. It is a verb that means to solemnly renounce a belief or claim.
Believe is a verb, not a noun, and therefore has no plural. The noun form of the word is belief, and the plural of belief is beliefs.
The word "belief" comes from the Old English word "geleafa," which means "belief, faith". The prefix "be-" in "belief" was altered on analogy of the verb "believe" . So, technically, the prefix of "belief" is "be-". But I believe you already knew that, didn't you? 😉
The word 'assertion' is the noun form of the verb to assert.
No, "thinks" is not an action verb. It is a mental process verb that describes the act of forming an idea or belief. Action verbs typically describe physical actions or movements.
BELIEF - something given credence or faith
"Ground" can be both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to the solid surface of the Earth or a reason for a belief. As a verb, it can mean to punish by preventing someone from leaving a place or to connect electrically with the ground.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is a verb (to conjecture, assume, or consider as possible).
The plural of the noun belief is beliefs.Example: There are many beliefs within this society.The word believes is the third person, singular, present of the verb to believe.Example: He believes that he can win.
The noun form for the adjective believable is believability. Example uses:Adjective: That is a believable theory.Noun: That theory has believability.