The noun forms for the verb to investigate are investigator, investigation, and the gerund, investigating.
The word research can be a noun or a verb. The noun form refers to a piece of research. The verb form means to investigate into.
The noun form for the adjective horrible is horribleness.
Implication is the noun form of "imply."
ability is the noun form of the adjective able;conversation is the noun form of the verb to converse;dependence is the noun form of the verb to depend;departure is the noun form of the verb to depart;dwelling is the noun form of the verb to dwell;favorite is the noun form of the verb to favor;happiness is the noun form of the adjective happy;information is the noun form of the verb to inform;rarity is the noun form of the adjective rare;weakness is the noun form of the adjective weak;writer is the noun form of the verb to write;writing is also a noun form of the verb to write.
The noun form for the verb 'to live' is the gerund (verbal noun) living.The noun form for the adjective 'live' is liveliness.A related noun form is life.
No the word investigate is not a noun. It is a verb. The noun form is investigation.
The word research can be a noun or a verb. The noun form refers to a piece of research. The verb form means to investigate into.
The word investigate is a verb, not a noun, and has no plural.The related noun is investigation, with the plural investigations.
Investigate can function as both a verb and a noun. As a verb, it means to carry out a systematic inquiry or examination; as a noun, it refers to the act of investigating or the process of conducting an investigation.
The verb form of "investigation" is "investigate."
No. Investigate is a verb. One adjective form is the word "investigative."
No. Investigate is a verb. One adjective form is the word "investigative."
It can be either the progressive stem of the verb, or the gerund, which makes it a noun form. It can also be used as an adjective. E.g. "The star was glistening on the Christmas tree" is a verb form, the progressive stem. But "There is some glistening here which I would like to investigate", is a gerundive noun form. And "Her lips were covered in glistening lip gloss" is an adjective form.
The word 'investigate' is a verb, meaning to systematically carry out a search or formal inquiry. Example sentence:Our experiment was an effort to investigate the manufacturer's claim.The noun forms for the verb to investigate are investigator, investigation, and the gerund investigating.A pronoun is a word that stand in place of a noun. For example: "boy" is a noun, and the pronoun that can replace it is "he." The boy went to school. He saw his friends there. Common pronouns are I, you, he, she, it, we, and they. So, the word "investigate" cannot be a pronoun. And it also cannot be a noun. A noun is a person (Joe, Maria, teacher, doctor), a place (Boston, Italy, Mount Olympus), or a thing (book, dog, telephone). The word "investigate" means to look for a reason or a cause, to try to solve a mystery. It shows action, and that means it is a verb.
The noun form for the adjective horrible is horribleness.
The noun form of the adjective 'prosperous' is prosperousness.A related noun form is prosperity.
The noun form of the adjective obedient is obedience.