Yes It is a Verb
ambiguously. The -ly gives it away. An adverb modifies a verb. "He responded ambiguously." "He responded quickly." The verb "responded" was modified to say how "he responded".
For the compound noun 'take away', a spots term for taking a ball or puck from an opponent or the British term for the US term 'take out' type of restaurant, the plural form is take aways. (There are three take aways on this block.)The verb form for the verb-adverb term to remove from a place or thing, a plural noun uses the form take away. (People take away..., Birds take away..., They take away...)
One thing this term can refer to is when a verb and adverb form a "phrasal verb pair" which may or may not be an idiom. This is also referred to as "verb and particle pair" which may also be a "verb and preposition pair."Examples:think over - considergive in - acquiesce, surrenderthrow up - vomitpass away - diegive up - quit
The word 'ease' is a noun and a verb. The adjective form is easy.Examples:She tackles the chaos with such ease. (noun)Just ease into the water and let your cares drift away. (verb)The product came with easy instructions for assembly. (adjective)
Stay, decay, fillet, sway, convey, bray (as the calling of a donkey), survey That's all I've got.
No it is a verb phrase. Passed is the past tense of the verb to pass, and away is an adverb which modifies the verb pass.
Verb
Avoid is a verb - to keep away from.
verb."i driffted away from the island."
"Go away" does not have a direct object. "Go" is a verb, and "away" is an adverb.
The phrasal verb for abandoned is "walk away from."
id say a verb because something can do that.
Away is not a verb and does not have a past tense.
was filled - passive verb phrasepassed away - past tense phrasal verb
the subject is band and the verb is travels
The phrasal verb of "avoid" is "stay away from" or "steer clear of".
No, the word 'depart' is a verb (depart, departs, departing, departed), to go away; to leave; to diverge; to pass away. The noun forms for the verb to depart are departure and the gerund, departing.