If it is used as the name of the action, then it is verb. Otherwise depending on the sentence construction and usage, it can also be used as a verb. It really depends on how the word is used in a particular sentence..............
Any other ideas?... Please inform me....
The word crawl can be used as a verb and a noun.An example as a verb: The baby crawled towards her father.An example as a noun: The traffic was moving along the motorway at a crawl.
It depends on how it is used. Bug can be used as a verb as in "I like to bug my little sister." It can also be a noun, as in "The bug crawled across the table."
The verb in this statement is crawl.Crawl is the verb because it describes an action.Crawls, crawling and crawled would be the related verbs.
No, the word 'crawled' is the past tense of the verb to crawl (crawls, crawling, crawled).The noun forms of the verb to crawl are crawl, crawler, and the gerund, crawling.
The past tense is crawled.
It Crawled Out of the Woodwork was created on 1963-12-09.
There is one syllable in the word crawled.
I crawled through the forest on my hands and knees
13 cm you have to substract
a cootie, bug, or lice
there is no past participle of crawl. the past of it is crawled.
The past tense and past participle of "crawl" are both "crawled".