That is the correct spelling of the word "imitate" (copy).
That is the correct spelling of the word "mimic" (to copy or imitate, or one who does this).
The word onomonopia is an informal variant of onomatopoeia (sound words that imitate natural sounds, such as oink, boom, croak, meow).
No. Imitate is a verb as it describes an action.
im- is the prefix of imitate. Im- can mean toward or not.
No, the word 'imitate' is a verb (imitate, imitates, imitating, imitated), meaning to copy something; to mimic someone.The noun forms of the verb to imitate are imitator, imitation, and the gerund, imitating.
The correct spelling is imitate (mimic, or copy).
That is the correct spelling of the word "mimic" (to copy or imitate, or one who does this).
The correct spelling is onomatopoeia. It refers to words that imitate the sounds they represent, like "buzz" or "meow."
The word onomonopia is an informal variant of onomatopoeia (sound words that imitate natural sounds, such as oink, boom, croak, meow).
No. The correct spelling is onomatopoeia, meaning words that imitate natural sounds (e.g. buzz, splash, bang, thud, tweet, sniff).
The suffix of "imitate" is "-ate."
Imitating is the present participle of imitate.
No. Imitate is a verb as it describes an action.
im- is the prefix of imitate. Im- can mean toward or not.
"As they grow, children imitate the words and actions of their parents." "I want to imitate what Muhammad Ali did." "Artifical flavorings attempt to imitate the taste of natural ingredients." "Mockingbirds imitate the calls of other birds." "Young cheetahs have black and white markings on their backs which imitate those of wild badgers."
You can imitate Abraham by being obi dent to god.
No, the word 'imitate' is a verb (imitate, imitates, imitating, imitated), meaning to copy something; to mimic someone.The noun forms of the verb to imitate are imitator, imitation, and the gerund, imitating.