No, the word 'succeed' is a verb, a word meaning to achieve the desired aim or result; to flourish, prosper, or thrive; to replace another in office or position; to come next in time or order.
The noun form for the verb to succeed is the gerund, succeeding.
Related noun forms are success, succession, and successor.
Yes, "planning to succeed" is a gerund phrase because it functions as a noun in a sentence, emphasizing the action of planning.
The word 'will' is both a verb (will, wills, willing, willed) and a noun (will, wills).Examples:If you won't do it, I will. (verb)The doctor will see you now. (auxiliary verb)The family is coming for the reading of his will. (concrete noun)She has the will to succeed. (abstract noun)
will succeed
present - succeed past - succeeded future - will succeed / going to succeed
No, it is not. The word succeed is a verb (to succeed, to be successful).
The adjective form of succeed is successful.
The noun forms of the verb to succeed is succeeder (one who succeeds) and the gerund, succeeding.Related noun forms are success and succession.
The noun forms of the verb to succeed is succeeder (one who succeeds) and the gerund, succeeding.Related noun forms are success and succession.
success
The word succeed is not an adjective; succeed is a verb (succeed, succeeds, succeeding, succeeded).The abstract noun forms are successor, succession, success, and the gerund, succeeding.The adjective forms are successive, successful.
The abstract noun forms for the verb to succeed are succession and the gerund, succeeding.A related abstract noun is success.
No, the word successful is an adjective; the noun form for the adjective is successfulness.The word 'succeed' is a verb (succeed, succeeds, succeeding, succeeded).The noun forms for the verb to succeed are successor, succession, success, and the gerund, succeeding.
Succeeded is a verb, a form of to succeed. The abstract noun form is success.
No, the word 'succeed' is not a noun.The word 'succeed' is a verb, a word meaning to turn out well; to reach a desired goal; to be successful; to follow after another in order; to come next after another in office or position.The noun form of the verb to succeed is success or succession, both are abstract nouns as words for concepts.
Yes, "planning to succeed" is a gerund phrase because it functions as a noun in a sentence, emphasizing the action of planning.
success is a noun, but it also has adjectival, adverbial and verb forms: successful (adj), successfully (adv) and succeed (v).
As a noun, triumph is a conclusive success or victory, or a state of joy at success. As a verb, to triumph means to succeed, or to celebrate success.