The verb is was; the verb phrase is was penalized(The whole team was penalized...)
Foul can be an adjective, a noun, or a verb. As an adjective, it can mean offensive to smell; evil, impure, or wicked; filthy or covered with something noxious; very undesirable or loathsome; stormy; outside the foul lines in baseball; or unfair or not according to the rules of a sport or game. As a noun, it can mean either a ball hit outside the foul lines in baseball or an action that is not according to the rules of a sport or game. As a verb, it can mean to make foul, to become entangled, or to hit a ball outside the foul lines in baseball. Here are some sample sentences.As adjective:"The foul smell of rotting Easter eggs caused the cats to investigate.""Child abuse is a foul act.""When the new owners removed the boards from the door of the small hut on the property, they were dismayed to see a foul room encrusted with years of dirt.""The foul weather kept most people indoors.""The first batter hit several foul balls before hitting one into the infield.""Hitting below the belt is a foul move in boxing."As noun:"The football player was removed from the game for too many fouls.""The catcher caught the foul and made the final out of the inning."As verb:"The baby fouled his crib.""She no longer goes fishing because she tends to foul the fishing line on rocks or tree limbs.""The next batter often fouls the ball."
Usually fair is given as the antonym for foul, as in foul play, foul weather, etc. There are many others, however, as there are several definitions of foul to begin with.
as a verb: kill, assassinate, execute, extinguish, knock off, gank as a noun: homicide, asassination, manslaughter, massacre, dispatch, foul play
it is a metaphore saying that everything that is foul (bad) was meant to be taht way. and everything that is fair is meant to be decieving and foul
No, the word 'foul' is a verb, a noun, or an adjective (but not a pronoun).Examples:He managed to foul the lines the first time he tried lowering the sail. (verb)The coach called a foul for unnecessary roughness. (noun)A foul odor came from the pot on the stove. (adjective)
Yes, the word foul is a noun (foul, fouls), a verb(foul, fouls, fouling, fouled), and an adjective (foul, fouler, foulest). Examples:Noun: The referee called a foul.Verb: Take care with the fertilizer, it can foul the pond.Adjective: We don't allow foul language here.
The verb is was; the verb phrase is was penalized(The whole team was penalized...)
The English verb "befoul" was coined during the early 14th century, combining "be-" + "foul".
Yes, the noun 'foul' is a common noun; a general word for an infraction or a violation of the rules of play; in baseball, a ball that has been hit outside the limits of the playing area; an entanglement or collision in fishing or sailing; a word for any foul of any kind.The word 'foul' is also a verb and an adjective.
As a linking verb, "smell" describes a state of being, such as "The flowers smell sweet." As an action verb, "smell" refers to the act of perceiving an odor, like "I can smell dinner cooking."
"puer" is the French verb for the English "to stink, to have a foul smell" "ça pue" is translated "it stinks"
The verb for detection is detect.Other verbs are detects, detecting and detected.Some examples are:"I detect a foul smell in the air"."He detects something"."My metal detector is detecting something"."As usual, the detector only detected junk".
Foul can be an adjective, a noun, or a verb. As an adjective, it can mean offensive to smell; evil, impure, or wicked; filthy or covered with something noxious; very undesirable or loathsome; stormy; outside the foul lines in baseball; or unfair or not according to the rules of a sport or game. As a noun, it can mean either a ball hit outside the foul lines in baseball or an action that is not according to the rules of a sport or game. As a verb, it can mean to make foul, to become entangled, or to hit a ball outside the foul lines in baseball. Here are some sample sentences.As adjective:"The foul smell of rotting Easter eggs caused the cats to investigate.""Child abuse is a foul act.""When the new owners removed the boards from the door of the small hut on the property, they were dismayed to see a foul room encrusted with years of dirt.""The foul weather kept most people indoors.""The first batter hit several foul balls before hitting one into the infield.""Hitting below the belt is a foul move in boxing."As noun:"The football player was removed from the game for too many fouls.""The catcher caught the foul and made the final out of the inning."As verb:"The baby fouled his crib.""She no longer goes fishing because she tends to foul the fishing line on rocks or tree limbs.""The next batter often fouls the ball."
Pollute, stain soil, smudge, contaminate, foul, are some synonyms for 'make dirty'.The word dirty itself can be used as verb. Example:Don't dirty your clothes when you play outside.
foul as in; foul smell: nauseabond, infect, sale foul as in; foul play: jeu deloyal (malveillance)
Foul (as in foul ball) and fowl (as in a bird)