Tremble is an intransitive verb. Trembled is the past of tremble. It is also a noun.
Tall, towering, trembling trees tossed in the tempest.
"She trembled with anticipation at the thought of being in the presence of such an august personage as the Queen of England".
As the question is written, it means nothing.You put the full sentence as another question, they must go together.The sentence isThe sky was a ragged blaze of red and pink and orange and its double trembled on the surface of the pond like color spilled from a paintbox.The meaning is:The sky was mirrored in the pond. The real sky seemed to have a double on the surface of the pond, and this double was trembling on the water.
The noun 'is' is a verb, a form of the verb 'to be'. The verb 'is' functions as an auxiliary verb and a linking verb.
It is an action verb.
Since it is a verb in the past tense, it can be used in the sentence, "You can find the word ''trembled'' in the dictionary."
Jehovah's Witnesses have not 'trembled' at the clergy of Christendom; neither have we 'trembled' at the most powerful governments. After all, we are Jehovah's own witnesses, and we have 'trembled' only before Jehovah God. (There you have the word 'trembled' 3 times.)
What part of the sentence is ''trembled in the gusting wind''? The large oak tree trembled in the gusting wind.
No, it is not an adverb. Tremble is a verb, and the closest adverbs are likely "tremblingly" or tremulously."
The Aspen trees trembled in the slightest breezes.
When the Earth Trembled - 1913 was released on: USA: November 1913
The Year That Trembled - 2002 is rated/received certificates of: USA:R
shook
bone
The past tense of "tremble" is "trembled."
The cast of When the Earth Trembled - 1913 includes: Ethel Clayton as Dora Bartley McCullum Lathan Miegzler as The Little Boy
Yes, it is perfectly acceptable English.