If used in the right context, sink is already a verb.
For example "to sink something" is an action and therefore a verb.
There is also sinks, sinking, sunk and sank, depending on the tense you require.
Depending on the right context, sink is already a verb. For example "to sink something" is an action and therefore a verb.
sink sank sunk
The word 'sink' is a noun (sink, sinks) and a verb (sink, sinks, sinking, sank, sunk).The noun 'sink' is a word for a basin fixed to a wall or floor and having a drainpipe and supply of water; a word for a thing.The verb 'sink' means to drop below the surface of something; to descend.
Founder can be either a verb or a noun. Founder as a verb is to sink, as a ship founders, or to stumble or go lame, as a horse founders. Founder as a noun is a person who establishes or begins something, as the founder of a university or the founder of a nation.
The word settled is a verb, the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to settle'; a word for the act of establishing a permanent place to live; the process for solid particles in a liquid to sink to the bottom or an object or to sink into the ground; to conclusively resolve a conflict; a word for an action.The past participle of the verb is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun.The noun forms of the verb to settle are settler, settlement, and the gerund, settling.The word settle is also a noun form as a word for a type of bench with high back and arm rests; a word for a thing.
Depending on context, sink is already a verb. For example "to sink something" is an action and therefore a verb.
Depending on the right context, sink is already a verb. For example "to sink something" is an action and therefore a verb.
Sink is a regular action verb depending on how you use it. He will sink the boat. It can be a future tense verb as shown above. It is also a noun. "Go wash your hands in the sink you filthy person." (that's your mom) :)
sink sank sunk
The word sink can be used as an intransitive verb, the verb form doesn't change the word.
sinking
The word 'sink' is a noun (sink, sinks) and a verb (sink, sinks, sinking, sank, sunk).The noun 'sink' is a word for a basin fixed to a wall or floor and having a drainpipe and supply of water; a word for a thing.The verb 'sink' means to drop below the surface of something; to descend.
No, it is not. It is a verb (to submerge, or descend), or a noun (a water basin).
No, the word "sank" is not a noun. It is a verb, specifically the past tense of the verb "sink".
To use "sink" as a verb, it typically refers to the action of something gradually moving downward or descending into a lower position or level. For example, "He watched the ship sink beneath the waves" or "The heavy rock sank to the bottom of the pond."
verb = sees adverb = swiftly
Yes, sank is the past form of the verb sink.sink = base verb -- The leaves sink into the water.sank = past -- The boat sank beneath the wavessunk = past participle -- The boat has been sunk.