Think about it. A verb is a doing word - so yes "Think" is a verb.
The verb 'thinks' is an action verb; to think is an act. The noun forms for the verb to think are thinker, one who thinks, and the gerund, thinking. A related noun is thought.
"Thinks" is Third-person singular simple present indicative form of the verb "think"
"He thinks" is correct. The verb "thinks" agrees with the singular subject "he."
The given sentence has got two clauses: First one is a main or principal clause, "Elena thinks" where the subject 'Elena' is first person singular which agrees with the verb 'thinks'. Second clause is a subordinate one: "five dollars are a lot of money". In this, 'five dollars', even though apparently a plural noun does work as singular noun, is the subject of verb 'are'. As 'a lot of money', the object of the verb 'are', is considered singular since the article 'a' makes it a singular entity, the verb 'are' does not agree with it. Actually the verb 'is' should be substituted for 'are' ("Elena thinks [that] five dollars is a lot money"). Hope this explanation clears the confusion.
Yes, the word 'think' is both a verb and a noun.The verb think (thinks, thinking, thought) is to form or have in the mind; to have as an opinion; to use the power of reason.The word think has a limited use as a noun as a word for an act of thinking, for example: We've had a good think and have made a decision.
"Thinks" is a verb. (present tense, third person singular of "to think")
The verb 'thinks' is an action verb; to think is an act. The noun forms for the verb to think are thinker, one who thinks, and the gerund, thinking. A related noun is thought.
"Thinks" is Third-person singular simple present indicative form of the verb "think"
"He thinks" is correct. The verb "thinks" agrees with the singular subject "he."
No, "thinks" is not an action verb. It is a mental process verb that describes the act of forming an idea or belief. Action verbs typically describe physical actions or movements.
to think: I think you think she thinks, he thinks they think we think I, you, she, we, they thought
to think: I think you think she thinks, he thinks they think we think I, you, she, we, they thought
"Thinks" is the third-person form of "to think", which is a verb... so no, it is not a plural noun.
"Neither her associates nor the doctor thinks the surgery is necessary" is correct. When more than one subject of a verb is joined by one of the conjunctions "or" or "nor", the verb should agree in number with the alternative subject closest to the verb in the sentence. "The doctor" [singular] is closer to the verb "thinks" than is "her associates" [plural].
The Spanish verb for "to think" is "pensar," which has various forms."Piensa" is the equivalent to "thinks."He thinks -- El piensa.She thinks -- Ella piensa.It thinks -- Piensa."Piensa" is pronounced pee-EHN-sah.
The given sentence has got two clauses: First one is a main or principal clause, "Elena thinks" where the subject 'Elena' is first person singular which agrees with the verb 'thinks'. Second clause is a subordinate one: "five dollars are a lot of money". In this, 'five dollars', even though apparently a plural noun does work as singular noun, is the subject of verb 'are'. As 'a lot of money', the object of the verb 'are', is considered singular since the article 'a' makes it a singular entity, the verb 'are' does not agree with it. Actually the verb 'is' should be substituted for 'are' ("Elena thinks [that] five dollars is a lot money"). Hope this explanation clears the confusion.
A (Copulative) Verb.