I can give you several sentences.
A sentence using the word scatter only is...
"SCATTER!"
The mouse scattered away.
The word scattered is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb scatter.
i scattered around my room to find my watch
use an alive verb
Yes and no! Love is a stative verb, you can use it to do linking and action verb sentences.
Yes and no! Love is a stative verb, you can use it to do linking and action verb sentences.
The word scattered is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb scatter.
No, it is a verb or an adjective.
Yes, scattered is an adjective. It is also verb, the past tense of 'scatter'.Scattered (adjective) - occurring or distributed over widely spaced and irregular intervals in time or space; "scattered showers"; "scattered villages".
they sprinkled, they scattered - from the verb "spargo, spargere"
i scattered around my room to find my watch
use an alive verb
when our tense is in the past we can use the helping verb had
To use an action verb for "said," you can replace it with more descriptive verbs that convey how the speech was delivered. For example, you could use "shouted," "whispered," "muttered," or "yelled" instead of just "said." This adds more detail and helps to paint a clearer picture of how the words were spoken.
No. You can use a be verb after don't - Don't be silly. You can use a main verb after don't - I don't like her.
The verb in this sentence is the word "is." When you use the verb "to be," you must use the correct form of it.
Simply, no, you can't use the word 'fact' as a VERB. You can use it as a noun.
No, "use" is an English verb (or it can also be a noun). The French version is "utiliser" (verb) and "utilisation" (noun).