Yes falling is a verb; it is an action. For example: The man is falling 300 ft.
"was falling" is the verb phrase.
The word 'falling' is the present participle of of the verb to fall. The present participle of the verb is also an adjective, and a gerund, a word that functions as a noun. Examples: verb: The leaves are falling early this year. adjective: He caught the falling bowl before it hit the floor. noun: Falling for that sales pitch will cost you a lot more money.
It can be a verb or an adjective. adjective: The falling snow is beautiful. verb: He is falling down the steps.
The verb is "warned." It's the past tense of "to warn." But be advised that some signs do not have verbs at all: they just have fragments like "no passing" or "school zone." And as others on this page have noted, "falling" can be a verb, but in the sentence you asked about, it is not--it's an adjective that describes "rocks."
Synonyms for "falling apart" include to break down, collapse, to lose control of your emotions, and to suffer a breakdown. "Falling apart" is a phrasal verb of "fall".
"was falling" is the verb phrase.
Do you mean the verb? was falling? in german it means Am späten Nachmittag fiel der Schnee in großen, weichen Flocken.
The word 'falling' is the present participle of of the verb to fall. The present participle of the verb is also an adjective, and a gerund, a word that functions as a noun. Examples: verb: The leaves are falling early this year. adjective: He caught the falling bowl before it hit the floor. noun: Falling for that sales pitch will cost you a lot more money.
The verb phrase in the sentence "Late in the afternoon the snow was falling in large soft flakes" is "was falling." This phrase indicates the ongoing action of the snow falling during that time. The auxiliary verb "was" helps to form the past progressive tense.
It can be a verb or an adjective. adjective: The falling snow is beautiful. verb: He is falling down the steps.
fall / falls / falling
The verb is "warned." It's the past tense of "to warn." But be advised that some signs do not have verbs at all: they just have fragments like "no passing" or "school zone." And as others on this page have noted, "falling" can be a verb, but in the sentence you asked about, it is not--it's an adjective that describes "rocks."
Synonyms for "falling apart" include to break down, collapse, to lose control of your emotions, and to suffer a breakdown. "Falling apart" is a phrasal verb of "fall".
no, raining is a transitive verb indicating large quantities of something is falling or intransitive verb indicating rain is falling.
None. An adjective is a word that describes nouns. London Bridge = proper noun is falling = verb, present progressive tense down = preposition, though some would argue that 'falling down' is a verb altogether just because they are used so frequently together (you wouldn't say 'falling up', would you?).
The correct phrase is "snow was falling." In this context, "snow" is treated as a singular noun, and the verb "was" agrees with it in number. "Snow were falling" would be incorrect because "were" is typically used with plural subjects.
In the sentence "Angela tumbled down a steep slope," the verb "tumbled" is an action verb. It shows the action of Angela falling down the slope.