Yes, laughed is a verb. It is the past tense and past participle of laugh.
The verb laughed is past. The sentence is past simple.
A regular verb. For example, 'laugh' becomes 'laughed'
yes It conveys a kind of action or change in a sentence. Example: "I became bigger." Became is what happened to me. It's like 'laughed' in "I laughed longer." where laughed is more obviously a verb.
The verb form for the noun laughter is 'laugh' (laughs, laughing, laughed).
The past tense of laugh is laughed.Laugh is a regular verb so you just add -ed to make the past tense.laugh -- laughedRun is an irregular verb so the past is not verb + -edrun -- ran
The verb laughed is past. The sentence is past simple.
regular
The verb form of laugher is laugh.Other verbs are laughs, laughing and laughed."I will laugh in your face"."We were laughing all night"."The audience laughed at the comedian".
No. Depending on how it is used, the word laugh is a verb or a common noun. However, it can be a noun adjunct, similar to an adjective, in the term "laugh track."
A regular verb. For example, 'laugh' becomes 'laughed'
If the past tense of the verb isn't formed by adding -ed to the end (e.g. laughed) then the verb is irregular.
yes It conveys a kind of action or change in a sentence. Example: "I became bigger." Became is what happened to me. It's like 'laughed' in "I laughed longer." where laughed is more obviously a verb.
The word "the" is not a verb or a noun. It's an article, a word used to identify a specific noun.
had is the verb. Laugh can be used as a verb. = He laughed to himself. A little laugh is a chuckle so you could write - He chuckled to himself
The verb form for the noun laughter is 'laugh' (laughs, laughing, laughed).
Laugh is a regular verb so the past and past participle are laughed
LIke so many answers to questions of this type: it depends. Action: "I told Alicia how much weight I had lost, she just laughed." Why action? Because it is an intransitive verb where there is no recipient of the action. "Saying": "I told Alicia how much weight I had lost. 'Won't the doughnut shop go out of business?" she laughed." Action: "She scoffed at my accomplishments." saying: She scoffed "Yeah, like that matters." The difference is in the presence of something said or, in this case, laughed.