Yes. He will win the marathon.
Win can either be a verb or a noun depending on its usage: Verb: "I won the game!" or "They were winning by three points." Noun: "To our surprise, the underdog team scored a win!"
It is neither. The word win is a verb (to achieve victory) or a noun (a victory).
The verb is celebrate.Other verbs depending on the tense are celebrates, celebrating and celebrated.Some example sentences are:"We will celebrate this news"."He celebrates the win with a beer"."We are celebrating the gold medal win"."The celebrated until the early hours".
Won is an action verb. It is the past tense of the verb "to win." An example of "won" in a sentence is: She won a scholarship to college.
yes, won is the past tense of to win.
"The team's manager should win an award." Should win is the verb; win being the main verb, and should being the modifier.
Yes, it can be: for example, she will win.
Yes, the word 'win' is a noun (win, wins) and a verb (win, wins, winning, won).Example:One more win and we will be in the finals. (noun)I hope to win a scholarship that will help with my expenses. (verb)
Win can either be a verb or a noun depending on its usage: Verb: "I won the game!" or "They were winning by three points." Noun: "To our surprise, the underdog team scored a win!"
Yes.
Won.
wincould is an auxiliary verb
Win can either be a verb or a noun depending on its usage: Verb: "I won the game!" or "They were winning by three points." Noun: "To our surprise, the underdog team scored a win!"
It is neither. The word win is a verb (to achieve victory) or a noun (a victory).
Won't is a verb.
Win as a noun is translated as νίκη [niki] (plural: νίκες [níkes]). The verb 'to win' is νικάω[nikáo].
Win is a verb and a noun, victory is a noun. You can have wins and can win something, but you can only have a victory or victories.