No. Educate is something you do. We educated our children at home. - this is something we did.
She is educated - this is a state, but the verb is a be verb.
The verb form is educate.
Be is a state of being verb.
Educate.
Edu- is the root for the English verb 'educate'. The Latin equivalent of 'educate' is 'educere'. The verb in Latin literally translates as 'to lead out'.
The noun forms for the verb to educate are educator, education, and the gerund, educating.
neither, a state of being verb
No.A basic sentence with a state of being verb is:I am happy, They are sad, She was readyIf you try to substitute can into these sentences you can see that it is not the same:I can happy, she can ready,State of being verb forms are:be, am, is, are, was, were, being, been
a action verb
A verb is a word for an action or a state of being.Examples:The dragon spoke to me. (the verb spoke is an action)The dragon is blue and green. (the verb isis a state of being)The dragon flew away. (the verb flew is an action)The dragon was awesome. (the verb was is a state of being)
A verb can show action, or it can show state of being. "To run" shows action. "Is" shows state of being. He ran down the street ("ran" is an action verb). She is very smart ("is" shows state of being, or describes her).
The word 'automobile' is a noun, a word for a thing.A verb is a word for an action or a state of being."Automobile is a noun." The word "is' is the verb, the state of being of automobile.
education