I hope to eradicate the ship's vermin without threat to the crew. You may commence to eradicate... now.
how will we eradicate the war in Iraq
"Mean" can function as both a verb and an adjective. As a verb, it refers to the act of signifying or intending something; for example, "What do you mean?" As an adjective, it describes someone who is unkind or spiteful, such as in "He was mean to his classmates." It does not function as a noun or adverb.
Yes.
No, the word eradicate (eradicates, eradicating, eradicated) is a verb, meaning to obliterate, to stamp out, to pull or tear up by the roots.The noun forms for the verb to eradicate are eradicator, eradication, and the gerund, eradicating.
Possibly you are searching for the verb: expunge?
It would me to clean and purify or to eradicate.
An adjective is a word that describes a noun.Examples:beautiful flowershappy childrenbarking dogsyellow carThe word mean is an adjective. Example: Billy is mean.
Clean, green,
It means a colour as an adjective
I hope to eradicate the ship's vermin without threat to the crew. You may commence to eradicate... now.
a adjective can mean you are tring to achieve a target
how will we eradicate the war in Iraq
I was trying to eradicate the pencil markings.
Their goal was the eradication of world hunger
An adjective is a word that describes a noun.
Yes, rumpled is an adjective. It can mean disheveled, not straightened.