The verb of assignment is assign.
Others are assigns, assigning and assigned, depending on the tense.
Some example sentences are:
"We will assign a new teacher".
"She assigns the employee to the top floor".
"They will be assigning us to a new squadron".
"The new teacher was assigned to the worst class in the school".
As a noun: He gained merit with his thorough and accurate reports.As a verb: I'm pleased with how this assignment is coming together, it should merit a high grade.
science assignment
ASGNMT or assignm't?
matematika is your assignment for today
A verb is an action. How is not a verb, if that was what you were asking
No. It is not an adverb. Assignment is a noun form of the verb assign and there is no direct adverb form.
The verb of assignment is assign. As in "to assign something or someone to something or someone".
The verb form of assignment is assign.Other verb forms are assigns, assigned and assigning, depending on the tense.Some example are:"I will assign you to the group"."He assigns her to the team"."I was assigned to the Royal Marines"."He is assigning us now".
The word assign is a verb (assign, assigns, assigning, assigned). The noun forms for the verb to assign are assigner, one who assigns, assignability, and the gerund, assigning. Another noun form is assignment.
The objective functions of a noun are:direct object of a verb: We sent an email.indirect object of a verb: We sent the class an email.object of a preposition: The assignment was in the email.predict nominative (a subject complement) The email is your assignment.
It's in the present perfect tense.
No, furious is not a verb. It's an adjective.
Stacy didn't care about doing her assignment.
Copy can be a verb or a noun. Verb: Please copy the homework assignment from the board. Noun: You must provide a copy of your license.
No, "Completed her assignment" is a verb phrase. A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and usually includes a noun or pronoun.
Assign is a verb. Example: The teacher assigns a lot of homework every day.
This sentence places the object before the verb.