I review
To review
Has reviewed
Will review
Is reviewing
"Review" can be either a noun or a verb: Roger Ebert gave that movie a favorable review. (noun) Roger Ebert reviewed that movie favorably. (verb, in past tense)
No, it is not. Review can be a verb (study, analyze, examine) or a noun. It can be used as a noun adjunct in terms such as review board or review process.
No. Reviewed is a verb. It is the past tense form of "review".
(verb) To look closely (none) an equal ; person of same rank
Safe is not a verb. It is an adjective. This is because it describes nouns. For example, "This is a safe place" - 'safe' describes the noun 'place'. A verb is a word that describes action for the most part. So examples of some verbs are run, jump, fighting, skiing, being, talked, screamed. These are just parts of speech that might be worthwhile to review briefly.
"Review" can be either a noun or a verb: Roger Ebert gave that movie a favorable review. (noun) Roger Ebert reviewed that movie favorably. (verb, in past tense)
No, it is not. Review can be a verb (study, analyze, examine) or a noun. It can be used as a noun adjunct in terms such as review board or review process.
No. Reviewed is a verb. It is the past tense form of "review".
Yes.review - present tensereviewed - past tensereviewing - verb
Yes, it cn be a noun, meaning an inspection or alternately a form of musical show. The verb is also to review, meaning to re-examine or to critique.
(verb) To look closely (none) an equal ; person of same rank
The prefix is re- (repeated), the root is view (to see), and the suffix (verb conjugation is -ed.
Yes, it is the form of the verb used with he/she/it or a singular noun subject.He reviews books for a living.The doctor reviews medical journals. -- singular noun subjectCompare with plural subject = they:They review staff performance every month.
Review of is correct.
Safe is not a verb. It is an adjective. This is because it describes nouns. For example, "This is a safe place" - 'safe' describes the noun 'place'. A verb is a word that describes action for the most part. So examples of some verbs are run, jump, fighting, skiing, being, talked, screamed. These are just parts of speech that might be worthwhile to review briefly.
Standing is a verbal noun, an abstract noun, from the verb 'to stand'. Standing is a verb and also an adjective.Example uses:Verbal noun: His standing in our organization has greatly improved by his own efforts.Verb: The little girl's legs got limp after standing for multiple hours.Adjective: We have a standing committee to review proposals.
Some other words for investigate include examine, inspect, probe, and review. You could also use explore and inquire. The word investigate is a verb.