yes
A vivid verb is a verb which creates a distinctive mental picture for the reader. A vivid verb for swimming is splashing around.
No, it is a verb
Swimming can be an adjective, e.g. swimming trunks, or 'a swimming head'. However, it can also be a noun, e.g. 'the sport of swimming', or a verb, 'the boy was swimming'. The present participle of "to swim" it is more technically a gerund used as a noun adjunct. Colloquiallly, a "swimming head" (from a head that is swimming, or confused) is an adjective.
Yes, swimming is a common noun; swimming is also a verbal noun (gerund), a verb, and an adjective.
No, the word 'swam' is not a noun.The word 'swam' is the past tense of the verb to swim.Examples:I can swim the length of this pool.I once swam the length of this pool four times in a row.The noun forms of the verb to swim are swimmer and the gerund, swimming.
A vivid verb is a verb which creates a distinctive mental picture for the reader. A vivid verb for swimming is splashing around.
yes, swimming is a verb. A verb is a doing word and hence, you can swim.
No, it is a verb
A subject verb is created when the act of doing something becomes the subject of a sentence. For example, although swimming is a verb, in the statement, "Swimming is fun," the act of swimming is now the subject of the sentence.
"Swimming" is a verb ending in -ing that can be used as a noun, as in "I enjoy swimming."
The word 'swims' is both a noun (swim, swims) and a verb (swim, swims, swimming, swam, swum).Examples:The swims that I take every morning give me a lot of energy for the day. (noun)Jack swims every day in the pool at the health club. (verb)
swimming
swimming (verb) : nager swimming (sport): la natation
Yes, swim is an action verb, a word for the act of propelling the body through water.
Swimming can be an adjective, e.g. swimming trunks, or 'a swimming head'. However, it can also be a noun, e.g. 'the sport of swimming', or a verb, 'the boy was swimming'. The present participle of "to swim" it is more technically a gerund used as a noun adjunct. Colloquiallly, a "swimming head" (from a head that is swimming, or confused) is an adjective.
Swim means nothing in Spanish. In Spanish, the verb "to swim" is "nadar."
Yes, a verb phrase can follow a liking verb, for example "I enjoy swimming in the ocean."