Yes, employed, the past tense of employ, 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).
No, wage is a noun and a verb.
The verb is to employ (employs, employing, employed).
Employ is a verb.Employ is a regular verb so the past and past aprticiple are both employed.
There are two forms of the word : EMPLOYEE (noun) - one who is employed EMPLOY (verb) - to use, or to have employed workers
The tense in the phrase "she was employed" is past tense. "Was" is the past tense form of the verb "to be," indicating that the action of being employed occurred in the past.
In the Shakespeare poem "Winter" the word "sings" is a verb, for an action by an owl.Then nightly sings the staring owl.
Adjective forms for the verb to employ are employable and employed.
The verb is to employ and one conjugation is "employs."The plural noun for workers who are employed is employees.
The word chauffeur is a noun, a person employed to drive. Chauffeur is also a verb for the act of chauffeuring.
A synonym for the adjective used is second hand. A synonym for the verb used is employed.
The sentence is stated in the present tense. The verb "to be" is conjugated in the present tense as: I am, you (sing.) are, he/she/it is, you (pl.) are, we are, they are. Don't be confused by the fact that the word "employed" is a verb form and happens to be a past form of the verb (known as the past participle). In this use it is an adjective. If you used the same verb all by itself in a sentence, it would be past tense (for example, "My father employed three people in his shop."). It's the structure of the sentence and not just the one word that tells you how to interpret it. SapphireMoon
Yes, "hired" is a verb. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "hire," which means to employ someone for work or to engage the services of someone. In a sentence, it can be used to indicate that someone has been employed, for example, "She hired a new assistant."