My new next door neighbor is a creep.
The boy quickened his pace when he realized that the creep was following him.
An unusual degree of rancor creep into the tone of the political debate in an election year.
Yes, creep is a noun, as in "he was a creep". It can also be a verb, as in "he crept along".
The present tense of the verb "creep" is: 1: First person singular: creep 2:Second person singular: creep 3:Third person singular: creeps 4: First person plural: creep 5:Second person plural: creep 6:Third person plural: creep
enjoin use in sentence
The boy quickened his pace when he realized that the creep was following him.
The creep in the nearby beach head had developed benifiting it physically and environmentaly
As a verb: While the humans sleep, spiders slowly creepthrough the house.As a noun: The creep offered to take me to the opening if I would buy the tickets.
An unusual degree of rancor creep into the tone of the political debate in an election year.
SingularI will creepYou will creepHe/she/it will creepPluralWe will creepYou will creepThey will creep
of Creep, of Creep, imp. & p. p. of Creep.
Yes, creep is a noun, as in "he was a creep". It can also be a verb, as in "he crept along".
Cause a Creep creep's up on someone slowly and a Creep is very slow
Yes, creep is a noun, as in "he was a creep". It can also be a verb, as in "he crept along".
The root word is spelled creep, which means to move stealthily or cautiously. It is a verb. The word has also been used as a noun, but only in slang, as in "the creep". Creep as a verb becomes crept in the past tense, just as kneel becomes knelt.
Whenever a creep comes around, the Creep Monitor starts to blink and beep. The frequency increases as the creep gets closer.
dead creep Crept.