Yes, it can be a verb. It can mean to give the letter sequence of a word (spelling), or to relieve someone while in the process of doing work (spell a co-worker).
The word spell can also be a noun (period of time, or a magical incantation).
The past tense verb is spelled interfered (meddled), from verb to interfere.
The correct spelling of the verb is "practice" in American English and "practise" in British English.
That is the correct spelling of the verb or helper verb "did" (past tense of to do).Similar words are dead and died.
No it is not. The past participle of spell is "spelled" or "spelt" whereas "learnt" (also "learned") is the past particple of "to learn".These are two different verbs. The only verb in English which derived its past tense form from a wholly different verb is the verb "to go", whose past tense is "went", which was derived not from "go", but from "to wend", another verb similar in meaning which is still in use today.
The correct spelling of the verb is to represent.
Yes. "Spell" is a verb. It is the action of spelling another word. It can also be a noun, such as a magical spell.
Those letters will spell the verb launder.
Those letters spell the verb 'bathe'.
Those letters will spell the verb utilize.
The correct spelling of the verb is "solve" (figure out).
As you have - either as a noun or a verb.
être (auxiliary and verb)
As a verb or noun?
A homophone for the verb 'cede' is seed (both a verb and a noun).
danser is the verb - you have to conjugate it.
The verb for "to give" is "dar."
The verb for taking a bath is bathe.