No, pond is a noun.
The verb is skated.
Intransitive, because it can't take a direct object. In the pond, fish abound. Fish (subject) abound (verb). The pond abounds with fish. Pond (subject) abounds (verb) with fish (prepositional phrase). But never this: The pond abounds fish. Pond (subject) abounds (verb) fish (direct object). That last construction doesn't exist.
The word 'pond' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a small, still body of water; a word for a thing.
No it is not. It is a noun for a small body of water, and sometimes a verb meaning to gather as in a puddle.
"pond" is a noun. An adjective describes a noun. the pond is shallow...shallow being the adjective and pond being the verb. Any "thing" is a noun.
In the sentence "We must not drink water from a pond or lake," the predicate is "must not drink water from a pond or lake." The predicate contains the verb "must drink" along with its modifiers and objects, conveying the action being taken by the subject "we."
The word 'waddle' is both a noun and a verb; for example: Noun: By the end of the pregnancy, I walked with a waddle. Verb: Just after daybreak, mama and her ducklings waddle along the path to the pond.
The word "quiet" can be a verb or an adjective.- Verb : to quiet is to calm or silence, e.g. She managed to quiet the crying baby.- Adjective : meaning not noisy, e.g. They were sitting by the quiet pond.
Quit is a verb. Example: I will quit tomorrow! I is the subject and pronoun will is a helping verb quit is the verb tomorrow is an adverb describing quit (quit when? quit tomorrow)
Modifier, subject, verb
The subject of that sentence would be "a family of ducks." The subject of a sentence is the noun doing the verb.
A pond man.