To dry is a verb, however the word dry can also be an adjective.
The past tense is dried.
No, it is not. The word wither is a verb (to dry up, or cause to dry up).
Dry is a regular verb so you add-ed t make the past and past participle = dried dry dried dried
"Dried" is a past participle of the verb "dry" and can also be used as an adjective.
Dried is the past tense of dry.
The past tense is dried.
The verb is to dry.
Dry is a noun an adjective and verb.
dry (adjective) I dry/wipe dry (verb)
Dry is a verb, and only nouns have plurals.
In the question, "Will you wash and dry the dishes tonight?," the word will is an auxiliary verb (helping verb) and is support for the main verbs (wash and dry).
No, it is not. The word wither is a verb (to dry up, or cause to dry up).
"Dry" is an adjective when used to describe something as lacking moisture. It can also be a verb meaning to become dry. When referring to a specific dry substance or area, it can be used as a common noun, such as "I added more dry to the mixture."
Neither it is a main verb the past tense of stunt. The hot dry weather stunted the tomato plants.
Deserted can be a verb and an adjective. Verb: Past tense of the verb 'desert'. Adjective: Abandoned.
Dry can be a verb, an adjective, or a noun:'It was raining, so we had to dry the washing indoors.' (Verb)'The clothes were dry by the evening.' (Adjective)'His brothers could not have been more different: David was a dry, while Paul was an alcoholic.' (Noun)As a noun, the word is also used colloquially to mean the opposite of wet as a noun:'You've got soaked in the rain - come on into the dry!'
It can be, meaning without water, or arid, or not damp. Dry is also a verb (to dry) meaning to remove water or other liquid, or to dehydrate.