No. Agreed, meaning to hold the same view, is an adjective.
A verb would be agree. As in "to agree with".
A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
An adjective is a word that describes a noun (the car is blue / it was a cold day / etc).
yes
No, agree is actually a verb. However, you could make it an adjective by saying "agreeable." The past participle can also be an adjective (the agreed boundary).
The verb of anonymous is anonymise (or anonymize in US spelling).Other verbs are anonymises, anonymising and anonymised depending on the tenses.Some example sentences are:"I will anonymise myself online"."She anonymises her online presence"."We are anonymising the voters"."The court agreed that the witness can be anonymised".
A verb is an action. How is not a verb, if that was what you were asking
The verb forms are access, accesses, accessing, accessed. The verb access is an action verb (a verb for an act).
Agree is already in verb form. As in "to agree".Other verbs are agrees and agreed. Depending on the context.Some example sentences are:"I agree with you"."He agrees with you"."She agreed with you".
The word 'agreed' is the past tense of the verb 'to agree'. The noun forms for the verb are the gerund, agreeing, and the noun agreement.
yes
The verb is "agreed." The clause "to help you learn math" is an objective infinitive, and acts as the object. The subject is "they."
Agreed is the past tense of the verb agree.
"Agreed" can function as both an adjective and a verb. As an adjective, it describes something on which two or more parties have reached a consensus. As a verb, it signifies the action of coming to a mutual understanding or approval.
The word agree is a verb. The past tense is agreed.
Yes. It modifies a verb or adjective, as in "He grudgingly agreed," or "She was grudgingly cooperative."
taste
No, agree is actually a verb. However, you could make it an adjective by saying "agreeable." The past participle can also be an adjective (the agreed boundary).
No, it is not. It is a verb form, the past tense of "to disagree." Unlike its antonym (agreed), it is not used as an adjective.
The linking verb in the sentence is "taste". It links the subject "we" to the adjective phrase "very hot and spicy."