The verb form or the noun form?
Verb:
He cudgeled his opponent, knocking him unconscious.
Noun:
He struck his opponent on the back of the head with his cudgel.
nose We made a snowman with a carrot nose.
Two English words that sound identical to the word "nose" but differ in spelling are "knows", the third-person of "know", and "nos", the plural of the word "no".
Yes this word is commonly used in that part of speech for example in the sentence "He knows what that thing is."
The word "very" modifies the adverb "well" in the sentence. It intensifies the degree to which the younger brother knows her.
Because everybody knows that the bird is the word!
The word cudgel is both a noun and a verb (Please don't cudgel me with that cudgel).
a club
viking cudgel
Cudgel: (n.) a heavy stick or club (v.) to beat with a cudgel, (v.) to beat with a hand or instrument.
cudgel
Club, truncheon, stick...
That knight had a cudgel in his hand. He had a plan to bludgeon his enemies with it.
cudgel
A cudgel is a short thick stick used as a weapon. Volition is the faculty or power of using one's will.
A lawyer can end up with… Answer: A COURT DATE, arbor, aorta, teacup, cudgel
association, company, group, union, society, lodge, guild, fraternity, strick, bat, bludgeon, truncheon, cudgel, beat, strike, hammer, batter, bash, pummel
Latin is a language that uses case endings to show the relationship of the parts of speech to the verb and to the rest of the sentence. The Latin word 'fustem' is in the accusative case, as a direct object. It meaning is club, cudgel, staff or stick.