The verb for friend is befriend.
Other verbs are befriends, befriending and befriended, depending on the tense.
Unfortunately thanks to social networks, some people thing "friend" is a verb, when in fact it is not. "I will friend you" does not make sense in the English language.
Some (correct) examples are:
"I will befriend her".
"She befriends the new boy".
"We are befriending him because he is cool".
"He was befriended by the group".
The homonym for "friend" is "friended," which is the past tense form of the verb "friend."
subject = friend predicate = verb = learned
The verb form of "friendship" is "befriend." It means to make friends with someone or to act as a friend towards someone.
The word encounter is already a verb because it is an action.Encounters, encountering and encountered are also verbs."We will encounter them soon"."She encounters an old friend".
There is no indirect object in the sentence, "Your friend tossed the ball to you."the noun 'ball' is the direct object of the verb 'tossed'The pronoun 'you' is the object of the preposition 'to'If the sentence were written, "Your friend tossed you the ball.", the pronoun 'you' is the indirect object of the verb 'tossed'. The noun 'ball' is still the direct object of the verb 'tossed'.
No, friend is a noun.
The verb for the noun friend is to befriend(befriends, befriending, befreinded).Oddly enough, the word 'friend' is the antiquanted verb for 'befriend', which is once again in use as a verb for 'add someone as a friend on a social networking website'.
befriend
The action verb for the adjective 'friendly' is befriend.Example: I don't have a garden but I befriend the neighbors who do.More recently, the noun friend has become a verb, in the context of the internet. A related form of the verb 'to friend' is 'to unfriend'.Example: He wants to friend me on Facebook.
Friend
Friend is a noun. The verb form is befriend.
the verb is "practice"
Sat is the verb in that sentence.
The homonym for "friend" is "friended," which is the past tense form of the verb "friend."
Yes, the verb 'are' can function as a main verb or a helping (auxiliary) verb.Examples:You are a good friend. (verb)We are making pizza. (auxiliary verb)The boys are going to school. (auxiliary verb)
A noun (or a noun phrase) will function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.The word 'friend' is a noun.The term 'Jessica's cat' is a noun phrase.Examples:We brought Jessica's cat a friend to play with. (the noun 'friend' is the direct object of the verb 'brought' [brought what? a friend]; the noun phrase 'Jessica's cat is the indirect object of the verb brought)She called Jessica's cat her friend. (the noun phrase 'Jessica's cat' is the direct object of the verb 'called' [called who? Jessica's cat]; the noun 'friend' is the object complement [renames the direct object])
Helped is an action verb and is in the past tense in this sentence.