Yes. It can also be an adjective.
VERB: I clean my room every day.
ADJECTIVE: My room is clean.
Clean is a verb because your like cleaning a plant.
Yes. Clean can be an adjective and a verb as well.e.g. The kitchen is clean (description).
throw, fiz, organize, umm that's it for me
"Cleaned" is the past tense or past participle form of the base verb "clean". As with all other verbs, the participle can function in a sentence as an adjective, as in the sentence "A cleaned gun makes a better impression than a poorly maintained one."
adjective: propre verb: nettoyer
Depending on the context, clean is already a verb. For example "to clean something, someone or oneself" is an action and therefore a verb.
The verb form of "clean" is "clean." For example, you can say "I need to clean the house."
a verb
Clean is a verb because your like cleaning a plant.
Yes. Clean can be an adjective and a verb as well.e.g. The kitchen is clean (description).
Clean (adjective) = mundus, -a, -um To clean (verb) = purgare
The tense of the verb "clean" in the sentence is future tense, indicated by the auxiliary verb "will."
Clean is not past tense, it's present tense. The past tense is cleaned.
Limpo ( noun) to clean > limpar (verb)
throw, fiz, organize, umm that's it for me
The present simple tense of the verb "clean" is "clean" for the pronouns I, you, we, and they (e.g., I clean the house every day). For the pronouns he, she, and it, it is "cleans" (e.g., She cleans the dishes after dinner).
No, it is not a preposition. The word clean is a verb, adjective, or adverb.