Yes, grows, the third-person singular present of grow is a verb.
A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
Intransitive Verb.
Transitive Verb.
the verb is to grow. Present: Grow, Past: Grew, Past Participle/Perfect: Grown Examples: I grow very fast. Ana grew 5 inches last month. I had grown less than last year.
No, the word grow is a verb (grow, grows, growing, grew, grown). The noun form for the verb to grow is grower, one who grows. Another noun form is growth. Both nouns, grower and growth, are common nouns.
Answer:It depends if it is an adjective which is future tense if your entire body is growing. It is an adjective which is present tense if a stomach is growing because you're eating too much. Answer:Wrong. The answer is no.
The verb "grows" is the third-person singular present tense conjugation of the verb to grow(he grows, she grows, it grows). It may be transitive or intransitive.
grows would be the verb.
grows is an action verb grow+finite in simple present tense in concord with Pronouns He/She/It
The word grows is a verb, not a noun. The word grows is the third person, present, singular of the verb to grow.Example: My neighbor grows vegetables in his garden.
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No, the word 'grows' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to grow (grows, growing, grown).The noun forms of the verb to grow are grower, growth, and the gerund growing.
Intransitive Verb.
Transitive Verb.
intransitive verb. there is no receptor. ;)
The word 'grows' is the third person, singular present of the verb to grow: He grows tomatoes in his garden.Collective nouns are used to group nouns, not verbs.
No, it is a noun. It refers to the green leafy vegetable or the plant it grows on.
The word rarely is the adverb, as it describes when or where the poison ivy grows.