No, it is causative verb
The word 'makes' is both a verb (make, makes, making, made) and a noun (make, makes). Example: I hope that mom makes cookies today. (verb) I looked at several makes of cars. (noun)
Verb Past tense, and past participle of the verb to make.
"Payment" is a noun. In the sentence "You make a payment" the verb is "make". The verb most closely related to "payment" is "pay."
A transitive verb is a verb which requires an "object" in order to make the utterance complete.
Make is the verb.
make up is verb and noun
Yes, "make" is an irregular verb. Its past tense is "made" and the past participle is also "made."
No, it is causative verb
The word 'makes' is both a verb (make, makes, making, made) and a noun (make, makes). Example: I hope that mom makes cookies today. (verb) I looked at several makes of cars. (noun)
The verb to make strong is to strengthen.
One suffix you can add to "active" to make it a verb is "-ate." This would result in the verb "activate."
Verb Past tense, and past participle of the verb to make.
"Payment" is a noun. In the sentence "You make a payment" the verb is "make". The verb most closely related to "payment" is "pay."
To make a verb a present participle, add -ing to the base form of the verb. For example, the verb "run" becomes "running" in present participle form.
Make is an irregular verb. The past is made and the past participle is made.
I'm assuming you mean "What is the verb in the sentence 'It could make all your wishes come true?'" The verb is "make."