kicking, running, swinging, jumping, dazzling, playing, studying, reading, laughing, puffing, huffing, crying, buying, sighing, dying, lying, whining, Pitching, spiking, singing, sprinting, riding, eating,yelling, shouting, flying, digging, setting, serving,smiling,talking,packing.
There's more but that's it for now
Definition• used to form verbs which mean to put into or onto somethingencaseencircleendanger•used to form verbs which mean to cause to be somethingenableendearenlargeenrich•used to form verbs which mean to provide with somethingempower
en-danger-ly en- danger-ing danger-ing
3. (en-joy-ing).
There are 4 syllables. En-ter-tain-ing.
Hi,EN is a prefix found in many verbs like enlarge, enslave, endanger, enrich, ensure, encourage etc...EN is also a suffix found in many verbs such as frighten, threaten, shorten, worsen, weaken, sadden etc...The adjective light (antonym of heavy or dark) takes EN (lighten). However, the noun light takes EN as a prefix and suffix (enlighten)I hope I'm rightMed FekiTunisia
harden,
ing is not in the German language because it is not a full word. Some examples of words ending in "ing": singing-Singen jumping-Springen crying-Weinen eating-Essen exploding-Explodieren so you basically spell/say "ing", "en" in German ☺
Definition• used to form verbs which mean to put into or onto somethingencaseencircleendanger•used to form verbs which mean to cause to be somethingenableendearenlargeenrich•used to form verbs which mean to provide with somethingempower
German verbs all end in "en"
Derived verbs are verbs that are formed by adding affixes (prefixes or suffixes) to a base verb or noun. These affixes change the meaning or grammatical function of the base word. Examples include adding the prefix "re-" to "do" to form "redo" or the suffix "-en" to "dark" to form "darken."
glis-en-ing
Endings added to verbs to form tenses typically include -ed for past tense (e.g., walked), -ing for present participle (e.g., walking), -s or -es for third person singular present (e.g., walks), and -en or -ed for past participle (e.g., eaten).
these is for plural verbs en this for singular verbs. e.g.: this chair, these chairs
en-danger-ly en- danger-ing danger-ing
strengthen fasten
Past participles of regular verbs end in -ed or -d, for example, learned (learnt), liked, talked, winked. Past participles of irregualar verbs end differently and not with -ed, for example, been, done, run, sung. Present participles end in -ing
In the present tense, it is -an for -ar verbs and -en for -er and -ir verbs.