Yes.
He always questions what I say.
Yes, "questioned" can be a verb. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "question."
Who comes up with these questions? Victory is a noun.
The word 'enjoying' is functioning as the main verb in the sentence (You are enjoying the party).
The word 'question' is actually both a noun and a verb.Examples- "She asked a very simple question." [noun]- "The man was questioned extensively." [verb]
The subject receives the action of the verb. The dog chased the cat. what was chased = the cat.
The word 'question' is both a noun and a verb. Example uses:Noun: I can answer your question.Verb: The defense may question the witness.
A verb is an Action (Doing) word. 'How' in a sentence is a pronoun of question.
Yes, "questioned" can be a verb. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "question."
Question (noun) = rogatum To question (verb) = rogare
A verb is any word that shows action. You asked a question. I am writing this answer.
interrogative :A sentence of inquiry that asks for a replyquery: verb, Pose a question
The word 'question' is actually both a noun and a verb.Examples- "She asked a very simple question." [noun]- "The man was questioned extensively." [verb]
Who comes up with these questions? Victory is a noun.
The word 'enjoying' is functioning as the main verb in the sentence (You are enjoying the party).
The word 'question' is actually both a noun and a verb.Examples- "She asked a very simple question." [noun]- "The man was questioned extensively." [verb]
Type your answer here... First of, the question should have been constructed as "Is treatment AN action verb, a linking verb or neither?" The answer is neither. The word treatment is a NOUN and not a verb. A verb is an action word. The action word for 'treatment" is TREAT.
The subject receives the action of the verb. The dog chased the cat. what was chased = the cat.