catagorize
Category is not a verb. Categorize is a verb its forms are: categorize categorizes categorized categorizing
The verb "drew" is an irregular verb. Its base form is "draw," and it does not follow the typical pattern of adding "-ed" for the past tense. Instead, "drew" is the simple past tense of "draw," making it part of the irregular verb category.
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).
The auxiliary verb can is the closest verb to the noun ability.
Category is not a verb. Categorize is a verb its forms are: categorize categorizes categorized categorizing
The syntactic category of the keyword "turn" is a verb.
or is usually masculine mostly used in profession ir usually indicates that verb is in third category ar usually indicates that verb is in first category
"Every" is not a verb. It is an adjective that is used to refer to all the individual items in a specific group or category.
The verb for category is categorise (or categorize in US English).Other verbs are categorises, categorising and categorised.Some example sentences for you are:"I will categorise these books"."He categorises all the files"."I am categorising these notes"."Everything has been properly categorised".
It is a verb meaning to put something into a category. To file or contain something within subsets of a larger group.
Noun. Its fits into the category of person, place or thing. It is a thing.
verb
It would fall in the category of estar, as estar is a temporary verb and ser is permanent.
The word say is a verb. The past tense form is said. The gerund is saying.
The verb form "variety" does not exist as a standard verb in English. However, "variety" is a noun that refers to a range of different things or types within a particular category. If you're looking for the verb form related to the concept of providing or introducing variety, "vary" is the applicable verb, meaning to change or alter.
Car falls into the person, place, or thing category which makes it a noun.