Film can be both a verb and a noun depending how it is used.
Noun: My friend and I saw the latest Tom Hanks film last night.
Verb: I have to film a home movie as a class project.
"Has" is the verb in the sentence "That film has terrific special effects."
The verb of critic is criticise.Other verbs, depending on the tense, are criticises, criticising and criticised.Some example sentences are:"I will criticise this film"."She criticises the new book"."I like criticising people"."He criticised the awful writing skills".
Depending on the tense, the verb of director is direct, directs, directing and directed.Some example sentences are:"I will direct you there"."He directs them to the correct place"."He is directing the traffic"."I directed this film".
The verb of enjoyable is enjoy.Other verbs are enjoys, enjoying and enjoyed.Some example sentences are:"I enjoy ice cream"."She enjoys Nutella spread on toast"."I am enjoying this music"."I enjoyed the film last night".
No. The word seen is a past participle of the verb "to see." When used with a noun, it is considered a participial. e.g. "The last man seen in the film"
"Has" is the verb in the sentence "That film has terrific special effects."
The word 'film' is both a verb (film, films, filming, filmed) and a noun (film, films). Examples: verb: We start to film at the steel factory tomorrow. noun: The film was a documentary about steel making. noun: The stainless steel was covered with plastic film to protect it during shipping.
Yes, the word film is both a noun (film, films) and a verb (film, films, filming, filmed).Examples:We just saw the new film with your favorite actor. (noun)Grandma asked me to get the film in her camera developed. (noun)The kitchen was covered in a film of soot after the grease fire. (noun)The plastic film that they wrap this in is so frustrating. (noun)A security camera was able to film the entire incident. (verb)
The verb form of actress is act.Acts, acting and acted are also verbs.Some examples are:"I will act in the new film"."She acts like a child"."He is acting crazy"."I acted in a film once".
Star is a verb and a noun. Example (noun): Bob wants to be a star. Bob can see a star in the night sky. Example (verb): Bob wants to star in a film.
No, the word released is a verb; the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to release'. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, for example 'the released information', 'a released film'.
No, "developed" is a past participle verb used as an adjective. It describes the state of something that has been created or improved.
Death Becomes Her
The verb of critic is criticise.Other verbs, depending on the tense, are criticises, criticising and criticised.Some example sentences are:"I will criticise this film"."She criticises the new book"."I like criticising people"."He criticised the awful writing skills".
No, the word might've is not actually in most dictionaries but has become quite common to use as a contraction of the words 'might have'.The contraction made up of the auxiliary (helper) verb 'might' and the main verb 'have' to mean 'may have'.The apostrophe (') in the contraction represents the letters that are skipped (might've).The contraction might've functions as a verb (or auxiliary verb) to express possibility.Example:"Did you see that film?" "I might have."OR:"Did you see that film?" "I might've."The contraction might've used as a verb or auxiliary verb is recommend for personal writing only, not for school or business.
An excerpt is a short extract from a film, broadcast, or piece of music or writing. It can also be used as a verb.
The word 'thought' is a verb. It is the past tense form of the verb 'to think'.Example sentences:# I think that nurses ought to have more pay. (present tense) # I thought it was a very good film. (past tense)