Truth is not a verb. In the English dictionary, truth is defined as a noun.
In the dictionary, the abbreviation is v.
No.Fallis a verb the past of fall is fellnot falled. Falled is not in a dictionary.
Enjoys is a verb.
Depending on the context, 'known' can be a verb or an adjective. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/known
"Celebrate" is the first verb in the C section of most dictionaries that has two syllables.
macerate
"Last" can be a verb when used to mean to continue to exist or to endure. For example, "How long will this battery last?"
The dictionary form of a verb is called the base form or the infinitive form of the verb. It is the form of the verb that is typically used to look up the verb in the dictionary. In English, the base form of a verb usually ends in "-e," "-er," or "-ing."
In a dictionary, "vt" is an abbreviation that stands for "transitive verb." This indicates that the word or phrase it precedes is a verb that requires a direct object to complete its meaning.
Truth is not a verb. In the English dictionary, truth is defined as a noun.
Transitive verbs are denoted in the dictionary with the letters v.t.
"Yup," says the dictionary.
In the dictionary, the abbreviation is v.
The verb form of ambition is "ambition." For example, "She ambitiously pursued her goals."
No.Fallis a verb the past of fall is fellnot falled. Falled is not in a dictionary.
The past tense of a verb should have its own entry in a dictionary if the verb is "irregular", so that the past tense can not be formed by following the standard rules.