The judge was caviling on every aspect of my science fair project; He annoyed me with his critical questions.
The word 'cavil' is a verb and a noun.The verb 'cavil' means to make petty or unnecessary objections.The noun 'cavil' is a word for an objection seen as petty or unnecessary.Example:The opposition will cavil about the need for such a proposal. (verb)The cavil raised by the opposition seemed short of facts. (noun)
Despite his cavil to the contrary, the teacher could see that the student had plagiarized the work that was presented. Cavil is here used as a noun. As a verb, you might say, "Although his opponents cavilled, Roosevelt could see no valid reason not to proceed with the New Deal."
The verb in this sentence is the word "is." When you use the verb "to be," you must use the correct form of it.
Herb is a noun not a verb.
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The complete verb in the sentence is "should use."
no you need a verb and a noun
You cannot since it is not a verb.
does is not a modal verb
The word "run" is a verb. Example sentence: She runs in the park every morning.
John Cavil was created in 2006.
A physical verb is a verb that is used to describe the action of a sentence