"climb" is the verb in that sentence.
yes
Object of a preposition. The word "after" is a preposition, so "climb" is the object of the preposition "after".
This is a way to remember the order of street names in downtown LA. From Main you Spring to Broadway and climb the Hill to Olive. And wouldn't it be Grand to Hope to pick a Flower on Figueroa?
A noun is a person, place, or thing. Climb or climbed is an action and therefore a verb (past tense verb in the case of climbed).
It might be, rarely, as in climbed mountains versus unclimbed mountains).But it is usually a verb. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to climb."
climb
If it is the hill with the mansion on top of it, you climb the rocks.
Yes, climb is a verb (climb, climbs, climbing, climbed). The word climb is also a noun. Examples: Verb: We climb these stairs a dozen times a day. Noun: The climb to the top was well worth the view.
Bouley Bay Hill Climb was created in 1921.
Mount Evans Hill Climb was created in 1962.
The correct sentence with the correct preposition should read: "We climbed the hill slowly."
subir (to climb) or escalatorThe verb "to climb" is subir in its infinitive form.
no
It can be different parts of speech.Adjective: The climbing vine is taking over the side of the house.Verb: He was climbing the ladder.Noun: Climbing is my favorite sport.
You have to teach them Rock Climb, which is a HM(Hidden Move).
Climb is a noun and a verb but not an adverb.Noun: From bottom to top, the climb took two hours.Verb: Sue and Bob climb mountains on their vacations.
climbing