The word 'final' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for the last of a series or the last examination of an academic course.
Other noun forms are finalist and finality.
The verb of final is finalise.
Finalises, finalising and finalised are also verbs.
"He finalises the conclusion".
"We are finalising the project".
No. Stretched is a verb form or adjective, not an adverb.
The word 'reveal' is an noun form as a word for the disclosure of final information at the end of a play, film, or television program; the side of an opening for a window or a door between a frame and the outer surface of a wall; the framework or edge of an automobile window; a word for a thing.The noun forms of the verb to reveal are revealer, revelation, and the gerund, revealing.
The noun 'is' is a verb, a form of the verb 'to be'. The verb 'is' functions as an auxiliary verb and a linking verb.
The word 'caucused' is the past tense of the verb to caucus, meaning to hold a meeting with people with a shared political agenda.Example: The committee caucused on a final list of grievances.
Yes. The final E is silent. It makes the A a long vowel sound in the verb (DEL-uh-gayt) It does not affect the A sound in the noun. (DEL-uh-guht)
The past tense of the verb "final" is "finaled." For example, "The competition finaled last night."
No, it is either an adjective or a noun (final competition, final exam). The related verb to finalize means to conclude an agreement.
The verb of final is finalise.Finalises, finalising and finalised are also verbs."He finalises the conclusion"."We are finalising the project".
Finalize
Finalize
Well. The verb (action/doing word) is 'did'. The adverb (word describing a verb) is 'well'.
The only verb I can think of is "end". Three letters, I know. But the third-person singular conjugation is "ends".
Compared to the verb form, habitate, and the noun habitation, there is no stress on the A in the final syllable.
Yes. The word dripped is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to drip" (the final letter is doubled). It can be used as a verb or much more rarely as an adjective.
Conclude is the verb from which we get the word "conclusion." To conclude is to bring to an end, to state the final opinion. Many short essays will start the final paragraph with the phrase, "in conclusion."
"Final exams can subject students to considerable stress." "In the final phase, technicians subject the components to vibration and rapid movement to ensure that they are securely connected."
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.