defination
There usually is. "The dog is wet." is a sentence containing a noun (dog) a verb (is) and an adjective (wet) with the definite article (the) thrown in for good measure.
class/fair - nouns your - possessive pronoun went - verb/past tense of go to - preposition the - definite article
"Played" is the verb. Verbs are action words. "The dog" is the subject because it is doing the action, it is playing with the cat. "The cat" is the object, the thing being played with.
As a collective noun, it can take either a singular or plural noun. If, however, it follows the definite article the, you should use a singular verb, as in The number of students taking advanced math classes has fallen over the last ten years.
Sort of. Strictly speaking "to know" is the verb. However in a sentence the word 'know' can be a verb or a noun. eg I know what to do (know is a verb) eg He is in the know (know is a noun)
The word definite is an adjective; for example, I want a definite answer. It is not a verb.
do = verb the = definite article washing up = noun
Cannot be a verb. " naming convention for the process " is a noun phrase modified by the definite article " the ".
No. It is the definite article in English. ( a/an is the indefinite article). Articles are a special kind of adjective.
Patiner is a verb. You don't put any article in front of it.
When used with the definite article the, look is a noun. The past tense of the verb look is looked.
There usually is. "The dog is wet." is a sentence containing a noun (dog) a verb (is) and an adjective (wet) with the definite article (the) thrown in for good measure.
Using the context of this sentence, the parts of speech of each of the words is as follows: "The" = definite article "purple" = adjective "flamingo" = noun "flapped" = verb "outrageously" = adverb "as" = preposition "the" = definite article "blue" = adjective "alligator" = noun "closed" = transitive verb "in" = adverb "for" = preposition "the" = definite article "attack" = noun
"integral" is primarily an adjective, but in calculus it is usually a noun, as in "the definite integral of a function."
Shall = auxiliary verb we = pronoun light = verb the = definite article candles = noun (plural) now = adverb
There is no definite adverb for the word "slept" (past tense of to sleep). Adverbs formed from the verb include sleepfully and sleeplessly.
"Will" is a definite modal verb that is often used to extend offers or in making decisions. "Would" is a less definite modal verb used when choices are given and neither choice is more strongly desired. For a marriage proposal, "Will you marry me" is usually acceptable and often used, and makes better grammatical sense.