The verb form of "white" is "to whiten." It means to make something white or whiter in color.
Yep, it is a verb. It means paint or turn something white.
The verb phrase "have not yet visited the White House" is an uninterrupted verb phrase, as it is not separated by any other words.
The past tense is whited. (White is rarely used as a verb though)
The verb in the sentence, 'munched' is a transitive verb, a verb that takes an object.An intransitive verb requires no object, for example: The rabbit munched the lettuce and slept. (no object required for the verb 'slept')The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject (The rabbit is white. rabbit=white); or the subject becomes the object (The rabbit got wet. rabbit->wet).The rabbit is not and does not become the lettuce.
White can be an adjective -- Pass me a piece of white paper White can be a noun -- I like the white better than the blue White can be a phrasal verb -- Can you white out the errors on page two.
Yep, it is a verb. It means paint or turn something white.
It can be but white is usually used as an adjective. As verb it is usually used with out -- white out something
No, white is not an adverb, because white is an adjective.
pill: noun white: adjective
The verb phrase "have not yet visited the White House" is an uninterrupted verb phrase, as it is not separated by any other words.
The past tense is whited. (White is rarely used as a verb though)
White can be an adjective -- Pass me a piece of white paper White can be a noun -- I like the white better than the blue White can be a phrasal verb -- Can you white out the errors on page two.
The word white as a color is an adjective. It refers to a noun, not a verb. It can also be a noun meaning the color white, or the white part of an egg or of an eye
Weiss (or weiß) is the German translation of the English word "white", or a form of the verb "to know".
No, it is an adjective. It means having the white color or the consistency of milk.
The verb in the sentence, 'munched' is a transitive verb, a verb that takes an object.An intransitive verb requires no object, for example: The rabbit munched the lettuce and slept. (no object required for the verb 'slept')The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject (The rabbit is white. rabbit=white); or the subject becomes the object (The rabbit got wet. rabbit->wet).The rabbit is not and does not become the lettuce.
Favor is a noun and a verb. Noun: Would you mind doing a favor for me? Verb: He favors red wine over white wine.