Noun: I brought the mail in for you, mom.
Verb: I can mail the bills on the way to the bus in the morning.
noun: I shook his hand verb: Can you hand me the hammer?
The word produce can be used in either way, whether noun or verb. It depends on the context surrounding the verb. For example: A noun would be in a sentence like this: "We bought fresh produce at the store." The verb bought is being incurred on the noun produce. A verb would be in a sentence like this: "The chickens produce many eggs." The verb produce is describing what the chickens do.
Verb
The name for the -ing verb form used as a noun is a gerund or verbal noun.
"The sky is blue."
No, it's either a noun or a verb, depending on the sentence. An adverb is a word that describes a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.
The word forward is an adverb, an adjective, a noun, and a verb; for example: Adverb: I ran forward to make the play. Adjective: The forward seats have the most room. Noun: The forward scores the most point on the team. Verb: My mother will forward my mail while I'm overseas.
It is not a sentence. What are the clowns doing? You must have a noun AND a verb to make a sentence.
"Payment" is a noun. In the sentence "You make a payment" the verb is "make". The verb most closely related to "payment" is "pay."
noun: I shook his hand verb: Can you hand me the hammer?
Seismologist is a noun, and as with any noun, you need a verb and perhaps an object, and possibly an article. A seismologist measures earthquakes. article noun verb object
A noun and a verb. "John ran" is a complete sentence because it contains both.
To make a complete sentence, the sentence must have a subject and a predicate. aka a noun and a verb I love pigs
The predicate of a sentence is everything that is not the subject of the sentence, including the verb. A predicate noun is a noun that is part of the sentence that comes after the verb for the direct object, indirect object, and noun clauses.
As a verb: I had to bargain with the shopkeeper. As a noun: This thing that I bought was a bargain.
The word produce can be used in either way, whether noun or verb. It depends on the context surrounding the verb. For example: A noun would be in a sentence like this: "We bought fresh produce at the store." The verb bought is being incurred on the noun produce. A verb would be in a sentence like this: "The chickens produce many eggs." The verb produce is describing what the chickens do.
Yes you can. The present participle form of a verb - thinking, talking writing - is often used as a noun. egThinking is a good exercise. I like reading