The verb of sweet is sweeten.
Other verbs depending on the tense are sweetens, sweetening and sweetened.
Some example sentences are:
"I will sweeten the pot".
"He sweetens the tea".
"I am sweetening the dessert".
"The tea was sweetened".
The plural form for the noun sweet is sweets.
The adverb form of the adjective 'sweet' is sweetly.
Example: The nurse spoke sweetly to her little patient.
THE SUFFIX OF SWEET IS SWEET+NESS=SWEETNESS
sweetness
Sweeten.
way
sweetless
Sweetless
the sweet smell of successhave a sweet tootha sweet dealtake your own sweet timesweet sixteenwhisper sweet nothingshome sweet homemake it short and sweetsweeten the potsweeten the dealthe sweet thrill of victorybe all sweetness and lightparting is such sweet sorrow
No, the word 'sweeter' is the comparative form for the adjective sweet: sweet, sweeter, sweetest To 'sweeten' is a verb: sweeten, sweetens, sweetening, sweetened. Example: I sweeten my tea with honey.
The word 'sweetly' is the adverb form of the adjective 'sweet'.The word 'sweet' is also a noun form as a word for a food with a high sugar content; a word for an affectionate form of address for a dear or beloved person.The noun form of the adjective 'sweet' is sweetness.
The word air is a noun. "The air smells sweet."Air can also be used as a verb. "Mom aired the house out after burning the pie."
The word part can be either a verb or a noun. Used as a verb, it means to divide, to move something to two sides, as in Moses parted the red sea, I part my hair on the left. It can also mean to leave, to depart. Parting is such sweet sorrow. As a noun, it means a portion of segment of something, as in, I will eat part of my meal now, and save part for later.
"be sweet"
Sweet isn't a verb and so doesn't have a present participle.
The present participle of "sweet" is "sweetening."
the sweet smell of successhave a sweet tootha sweet dealtake your own sweet timesweet sixteenwhisper sweet nothingshome sweet homemake it short and sweetsweeten the potsweeten the dealthe sweet thrill of victorybe all sweetness and lightparting is such sweet sorrow
No, the word 'sweeter' is the comparative form for the adjective sweet: sweet, sweeter, sweetest To 'sweeten' is a verb: sweeten, sweetens, sweetening, sweetened. Example: I sweeten my tea with honey.
doux (sweet) is pronounced like the English verb 'do'
subject: we verb: had noun: sweet potato pie sentence: We had sweet potato pie with dinner. subject: Jack verb: rode noun: bike sentence: Jack rode his bike to school. subject: river verb: ran noun: farm sentence: The river ran through our farm.
Delight is a noun and a verb. "The arrival of the Snow Queen filled him with delight." (noun) "I delight in the sweet sound of music." (verb)
Yes it is. From the same root as the verb to savor, it means piquant or spicy, as opposed to sweet.
Based on the verb persuade. Root: Latin, per, "through," in the sense of "thoroughly," and suadere, "to urge," or more literally "sweet talk," from the root swad- meaning sweet.
Yes, sweetened, the past participle of sweeten, is an action and therefore a verb.A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
It can be, but is rarely used as one, to mean sweeten (as with honey). It is a noun for the sweet liquid produced by bees, or colloquially as a term of endearment.