No, it is a noun. It means a cost or service charge. Sometimes taxes are labeled as fees.
The contraction there'd is a shortened form for the adverb 'here' and the verb (or auxiliary verb) 'would'. The contraction there'd functions as the verb in a sentence or clause. Examples:I was told there would be a late fee. Or, I was told there'd be a late fee.
No. You should instead say, "Enclosed are my transcript and application fee", because the subject of the sentence is "transcript and application fee" and compound subjects (at least two nouns or pronouns joined by "and") always require a plural verb form.
Fee reimbursement is the price of the fee returned to you.
what is a bench fee
No. The plural for fee is fees. No apostrophe is needed.
Fee is not a verb so doesn't have tenses.
"A fee has been" is correct because "fee" is a singular noun, so it requires the singular verb "has been."
The contraction there'd is a shortened form for the adverb 'here' and the verb (or auxiliary verb) 'would'. The contraction there'd functions as the verb in a sentence or clause. Examples:I was told there would be a late fee. Or, I was told there'd be a late fee.
Difference between fee and fees : There is an agreement between the noun (subject) and the verb in number. If the noun is singular the verb should be singular in number. If the noun is plural the verb should be plural in number. Fee - Singular & Fees - Plural. Eg. Legal fees, University fees, an entrance/ registration fee, We couldn't pay the layer's fee. For more information please feel free to contact me @ ajichiravila@gmail.com
No, it's a verb. Definition: To engage the services of (a person) for a fee; employ: hires a new clerk.
No. You should instead say, "Enclosed are my transcript and application fee", because the subject of the sentence is "transcript and application fee" and compound subjects (at least two nouns or pronouns joined by "and") always require a plural verb form.
"I exalt (praise)" as a verb and "magnificent (extraordinary, generous, gorgeous, marvelous, superb, wonderful)" as an adjective are English equivalents of the Italian word magnifico. Context makes clear which meaning holds. The respective pronunciations will be "MA-nyee-FEE-ko" as a verb and "ma-NYEE-fee-ko" as an adjective in Italian.
No, "gifts" is not a linking verb. It is a noun or a verb that shows the action of giving. Linking verbs connect the subject of a sentence to a noun or adjective that describes or renames the subject. Examples of linking verbs include "is," "am," "are," "was," "were," "appear," "seem."
No, the form gift's is not a verb; gift's is the singular possessive form for the noun gift.Example: The gift's wrapping was yellow and blue.The verb forms are: gift, gifts, gifting, giftedThe verb 'to gift' is not a linking verb. For a verb to be a linking verb, the direct object must be another form of the subject (Mary is my sister. Mary=sister), or the subject becomes the object (Mary's feet got wet. fee->wet).Example: We gifted sweaters to the senior center. (the subject 'we' doesn't become the direct object 'sweaters')
is their a fee
will there be a fee?
Fee reimbursement is the price of the fee returned to you.