adroit, beastly, bright, circumspect, cruel, cranky, devilish, dire, dreadful, evil, feathery, feline, frightful, fearsome, frail, foolhardy, ghastly, grand, gullible, hellish, hawkish, healthy, irksome, irritating, irritable, just, loathsome, lilting, merciful, ostentatious, ostensible, paltry, parsimonious, pompous, prudish, prissy, quiescent, risible, riddled, sentient, sensible, saintly, strident, sacrosanct, splendid, spiteful, spirited, spent, surreal, terrifying, terrified, tempted, tasteful, troublesome, topmost, triumphant, uppermost, virginal, victorious, windswept, wretched, wanton, youthful
The root word is strong but there is no verb form of strongstrong·ish, adjectivestrong·ly, adverbstrong·ness, noun
The verb for strong is strengthen.Explanation:If you change strong into a noun (strength) you can then change it into a verb. (strengthen)
The adjective for of the noun "might" (strength) is mighty. (it is also used colloquially to mean very)The word might is also an auxiliary verb, which has no adjective forms.
The word courageous is not a verb, courageous is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. Example use:The courageous rescuer lifted the man from the raft at the risk of his own life.
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 suffix to make "strength" into a verb is "-en." Therefore, the verb form of "strength" would be "strengthen."
Strength is a noun, not a verb. The verb form is strengthen. The present progressive of any verb is created with am/is/are + a present participle (-ing form of a verb).I am strengtheningWe are strengtheningYou are strengtheningHe/she is strengtheningThey are strengthening
The verb form of strength can be; strengthen, strengths.
To strengthen.
Strengthen
Yes, the English word "enable", meaning "to give strength or ability to" is a verb.
"Weak" can be both an adjective and a verb, depending on the context. As an adjective, it describes something lacking strength or intensity. As a verb, it typically refers to the action of becoming weak or losing strength.
No formidable is not a verb. It is an adjective.
Force can be both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to strength, power, or influence exerted on someone or something. As a verb, it is an action that means to compel or make something happen by physical or mental strength.
The word "prevail" is a verb. It means to be widespread or to have superior strength or influence.
Might as in Strength = חוזק (khozek) Might as an auxilliary verb depends on the context of the sentence.
erection and how they have sex with your mama