The verb of celebration is celebrate.
Other verbs are celebrates, celebrating and celebrated.
Some example sentences are:
"I will celebrate this news".
"We celebrated all night".
"We will be celebrating with a barbecue".
"She celebrated the news of her pregnancy with a glass of apple juice".
celebrate
Yes, it is a form of the verb "to revel" (to enjoy oneself, typically in celebration). It is the present participle and can be a verb form or a noun (gerund).
The word 'celebrated' is a verb; the past participle, past tense of the verb to celebrate. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Example uses:We just celebrated my mother's sixtieth birthday. (verb)He gets higher prices now that he's a celebratedartist. (adjective)
Yes, it is. You can toast a slice of bread (or marshmallow), or people at a celebration.
The verb is celebrate.Other verbs depending on the tense are celebrates, celebrating and celebrated.Some example sentences are:"We will celebrate this news"."He celebrates the win with a beer"."We are celebrating the gold medal win"."The celebrated until the early hours".
Yes, the noun celebration is a common noun, a word for any celebration of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Celebration, FL 34747Celebration Lane, Staten Island, NYCelebration Inn, Lewisburg, TNMS Bahamas Celebration (cruise ship)"A Charlie Brown Celebration" 1982 TV animated feature
the verb from of celebration is celebrating
Celebration
Verb: to celebrate Adjective: a celebrate party or event
A celebration would be "eine Feier" in German. The verb "to celebrate" translates to "zu feiern".
The word 'celebration' is a noun form for the verb to celebrate.The adjective forms for the verb to celebrate are:the present participle of the verb, celebratingthe celebrating teamthe celebrating couplethe past participle of the verb, celebrateda celebrated authorthe celebrated hero
The word 'celebration' is a noun form for the verb to celebrate.The adjective forms for the verb to celebrate are:the present participle of the verb, celebratingthe celebrating teamthe celebrating couplethe past participle of the verb, celebrateda celebrated authorthe celebrated hero
Yes, it is a form of the verb "to revel" (to enjoy oneself, typically in celebration). It is the present participle and can be a verb form or a noun (gerund).
The word 'celebrated' is a verb; the past participle, past tense of the verb to celebrate. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Example uses:We just celebrated my mother's sixtieth birthday. (verb)He gets higher prices now that he's a celebratedartist. (adjective)
Celebrates is a VERB.
The verb of celebration is celebrate.Other verbs are celebrates, celebrating and celebrated.Some example sentences are:"I will celebrate this news"."We celebrated all night"."We will be celebrating with a barbecue"."She celebrated the news of her pregnancy with a glass of apple juice".
Yes, it is. You can toast a slice of bread (or marshmallow), or people at a celebration.
The noun forms of the verb to celebrate are celebrator, celebration, and the gerund, celebrating.The word 'celebratory' is the adjective form of the verb to celebrate.