PUT
is the verb
put
I think the answer is that the table is pulling down on the book.
place (verb), set (verb).
The word put is a verb. It is an irregular verb with put also being the past tense form.
An ifinite verb is a verb that you can put "to" before it. ex. to run.
extinguish
verb - We must book our tickets next week.noun - He put down the book and stood up.noun and verb - He read in a book how to bookseats over the internet.
drop, lower (verb), put down
No. A phrasal verb is made up of a verb - usually an action verb - plus a preposition or an adverb eg look out grow up stand up put off put down
Present simple tense. The verb phrasal verb puts down is the third person singular form of put down
The word may be:demand (verb, noun) - to insist, or an imperative requestdemeaned (verb form) - put down or disparaged, made light of
Yes, "put" is a verb. It is used to describe the action of placing something in a specific location or position.
No, "will" is a modal verb indicating future tense, and it does not function as a preposition.
No, "laid" is not a noun. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "lay," meaning to put or place something down.
Engrossing
Answer:I close the Book and put it down.
The irregular form of "put" in the past simple tense is "put." This means that the verb remains the same for both present and past tenses.
put it on the yeah