Down can be a verb, noun, adjective, adverb, or preposition.
The noun forms include
-- US football play
-- Duck and goose feathers
-- a grassy upland (UK)
The verb form can mean to
-- (US football) grounding the ball, especially on a punt
-- cause a plane to crash
-- drink, especially quickly
Walk can be a noun or a verb. Examples:As a noun: Do your walk before dinner.As a verb: If you walk down the hallway, the bathroom is on the left.
No, "laid" is not a noun. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "lay," meaning to put or place something down.
The word cab is a noun, it's a thing. He took a cab down town. (Noun) A cab picked him up and took him downtown. (Noun) Cabs have big seats (Noun) She cabbed her way around town. (verb, informal)
Yeah, it's a verb.
Notes can be a noun or a verb. Verb would be "He notes that the water was dripping." Noun would be "He took notes."
Walk can be a noun or a verb. Examples:As a noun: Do your walk before dinner.As a verb: If you walk down the hallway, the bathroom is on the left.
It can be a verb or a noun. As a verb you would "Cruise down to the corner." As a noun you would 'Take an ocean cruise."
Stream is a noun and a verb. Noun: We sat by the stream and ate lunch. Verb: Tears of joy streamed down her face.
No. Sat is a verb, as in, "I was tired, so I sat down."
No, "laid" is not a noun. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "lay," meaning to put or place something down.
Hunted is a verb as in 'they hunted him down'. Hunted is also a noun as in 'an area hunted over'.
The word cab is a noun, it's a thing. He took a cab down town. (Noun) A cab picked him up and took him downtown. (Noun) Cabs have big seats (Noun) She cabbed her way around town. (verb, informal)
Yeah, it's a verb.
The word weight is both a verb and a noun. The noun weight is a word for the heaviness of a person or thing. The verb weight is to hold down with a heavy object. Example uses: Noun: The apples are sold by weight. verb: We can weight the tarp so that is stays in place.
Shock is a noun and a verb. Noun: She was in shock when her unattended car rolled down the hill and crashed into a house. Verb: Your actions shock me.
The spelling Braik is a proper surname, but the common word is one of these:BREAK (verb, noun)verb to render inoperable or damage; noun a gap, or a short rest from work (coffee break)BRAKE (verb, noun)verb to slow in speed; noun a mechanism for stopping or slowing down (car brake)
Notes can be a noun or a verb. Verb would be "He notes that the water was dripping." Noun would be "He took notes."