The verb for repeatedly is repeat.
As in "to repeat something".
No, it is an adverb. The adjective is repeated, which is the past participle of the verb "to repeat."
I have repeatedly answered this question.
The hypothesis which has been tested and verified repeatedly by tests is called theory.
The verb forms are access, accesses, accessing, accessed. The verb access is an action verb (a verb for an act).
The auxiliary verb can is the closest verb to the noun ability.
The verb is repeat.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective is repeated, which is the past participle of the verb "to repeat."
"Are brought" is the present tense of the verb "bring." It is used to describe actions or events happening currently or repeatedly in the present.
Yes it is. Many (but not all) words that end in -ly are adverbs. You can use repeatedly to modify a verb. For example, "He denied the accusation repeatedly."
The meaning of jounce, as a verb, is to move joltingly up and down repeatedly.
The word roll is a noun and a verb. The noun form is the act of rolling. e.g. the roll of a ball. The verb form is to cause an object to revolve by turning it over repeatedly.
The word recurring is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb recur.
Continually is an adverb. It describes the action of a verb, often indicating that something is happening repeatedly or without interruption.
The verb 'tend' has two adjective forms, tended and tending. Neither has a formal adverb. Some adverbs that might describe the verb 'tend' are: carefully carelessly repeatedly seldom randomly diligently attentively inattentively watchfully frequently occasionally
Pelt is a noun (the skin of an animal with the fur still on it). Pelt is also a verb (throw something repeatedly--they pelted each other with water balloons).
The present tense of read is:I/You/We/They read.He/She/It reads.The present participle is reading.
Specere in Latin is an archaic verb meaning "to look at". It is the source of the more common verb with this meaning, spectare.The verbal ending -tare is what is known as a "frequentative" ending, which conveys the idea of performing the action of the base verb frequently or repeatedly. Thus, for example, dicere is "to say"; dictare is "to say often; to assert repeatedly". In many cases a verb that is frequentative in form loses that nuance, becomes more or less synonymous with the base verb, and then edges it out. This is what happened with specere and spectare. Another example is canere and cantare, both meaning "to sing"; it is the frequentative form that survived and gave rise to the modern Romance verbs for singing, such as French chanter, Spanish cantar, Italian cantare.