The verb forms are: fail, fails, failing, failed.
The noun forms are: fail, fails, failure, and the gerund, failing.
The adjective form is the present participle, failing, and the past participle failed.
There is no adverb form.
Examples:
I did not fail geometry! (verb)
He died of heart failure. (noun)
She refused to enroll her son in a failing school. (adjective)
Many verbs do not have opposites. The opposite could only be "to not aim."The adjective aimed can have the opposites random, or haphazard.
Failure. The only thing this God of Fail doesn't fail in is failing. So... Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. This is how much he fails. Get the point? Okay.
fail - fail(s), fail(ed), fail(ing), fail(le), fail(ure)
Oh, dude, the adjective for failure is "failed." Like, if you're describing a situation where something didn't work out, you could say it was a "failed attempt" or a "failed project." It's like saying, "Hey, that thing totally didn't succeed."
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
"foolproof" is an adjective. It describes something that is designed or organized in a way that it cannot fail or go wrong, making it very easy to use or understand.
No. In the pair, likely is an adjective, and less is an adverb. Likely by itself can be an adverb, as in they'll likely fail.
Many verbs do not have opposites. The opposite could only be "to not aim."The adjective aimed can have the opposites random, or haphazard.
wow your a failure, getting a Poke'mon stuck. fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail
Failure. The only thing this God of Fail doesn't fail in is failing. So... Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. This is how much he fails. Get the point? Okay.
Failure. The only thing this God of Fail doesn't fail in is failing. So... Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. Fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail fail. This is how much he fails. Get the point? Okay.
fail - fail(s), fail(ed), fail(ing), fail(le), fail(ure)
Yes, missed is a verb (miss, misses, missing, missed). Missed is also an adjective. Example uses: Verb: I'm late because I missed the bus. Adjective: That was a missed opportunity.
Oh, dude, the adjective for failure is "failed." Like, if you're describing a situation where something didn't work out, you could say it was a "failed attempt" or a "failed project." It's like saying, "Hey, that thing totally didn't succeed."
The past tense of fail is failed, the present tense of fail is fail, and the future tense of fail is to fail or going to fail.
The word 'failed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to fail (He failed his driving test).The past participle of the verb is also an adjective. (The failed experiment was a set back.)The word fail is also a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a grade that is not high enough to pass an examination or a class.The noun forms for the verb to fail are failure and the gerund, failing.
This question is not only a fail, its an EPIC FAIL.