Yes, cheers is a verb form (cheer, cheers, cheering, cheered).
The word cheers is also a noun, the plural of the noun cheer.
Cheers is also an interjection, often heard as a toast.
Cheerful is not a verb. Cheerful is an adjective.
The word adventure is both a verb (adventure, adventures, adventuring, adventured) and a noun (adventure, adventures). Examples: Verb: Come with me to adventure the rush hour subway. Noun: The adventure of a road trip always cheers me up.
Cheers = Saúde
Cheers in Tamil would be சியர்ஸ் or ciyars.
There is no English word for cheers in Italian. Italian only uses the Italian word for cheers.
I really was quite startled by the cheers of my team.
cheese
Cheered.
No, it is not. It is a verb form, the past tense and past participle of the verb "to cheer."
cheers
thanks cheers thanks cheers thanks cheers
The word adventure is both a verb (adventure, adventures, adventuring, adventured) and a noun (adventure, adventures). Examples: Verb: Come with me to adventure the rush hour subway. Noun: The adventure of a road trip always cheers me up.
Slancha is an anglicisation. In Irish it's "Sláinte", it means "cheers"
Melville's
The duration of Cheers is 1440.0 seconds.
Cheers Then was created in 1982-01.
Sláinte~ Cheers
"Cheers" is what you say in Britain!