smash, strike, smack, pound, fivepointsofpain.
I don't know which one is The homonym so here are a few, lit, fit, mit, bit, kit, git, knit, pit, sit, wit, zit.
hit whipped whopped
action verb
Yes, it is a linking verb. Like in, Cuba is a country.
The word caring can be an adjective and a verb. The adjective is used to describe someone who is kind and sensitive. The verb form is the present participle of the verb "care".
The noun 'hit' is an abstract noun as a word for a success in a field of entertainment or writing; a word for a successful match in a computer search; a word for an instance of a particular website being accessed by a user; an informalword a dose of an illegal substance; an informal word for a murder that a criminal does for someone else; a for a word for a concept.The noun 'hit' is a concrete noun as a word for a physical strike or blow.The word 'hit' is also a verb: hit, hits, hitting, hit.
Verbs are those special words that are actions.The word "verb" comes from the Latin "verbum" which means "word". It's curious that "verb", "verbum" and "word" are all nouns, while the word "verb" describes an "action" as opposed to a thing/noun. We seem to have an inner understanding that the "word" can be a kind of active principle.See the link for more information.
to acknowledge is a verb acknowledged is either a verb or a past participle (a kind of adjective) the acknowledged is an adjective (past participle) being used as a noun
action verb
The word "hit" is a transitive verb in a sentence, as it requires an object to complete its meaning. In the sentence "She hit the ball," "the ball" is the object that is being directly affected by the action of hitting.
The word 'be' is not a noun. The word 'be' is a verb, the verb to be.
A verb...
The kind that's actually a noun instead of a verb.
"Here" can function as an adverb indicating location or position.
It is a verb.
future word
For is not a verb it is a preposition or a conjunction
a past-tense action verb.
The word 'mighty' is not any kind of verb. It is an adjective. The word 'might' may be a verb, in which case it is an auxiliary (or 'helping') verb.
No, it is not. the word miss is a title, a noun (not a hit), or a verb (to not hit a target, or to feeling longing).