The verb associated with "difficulty" is "struggle." It conveys the idea of exerting effort to overcome challenges or obstacles. Other related verbs include "strive" and "grapple," which also imply facing and attempting to overcome difficulties.
The verb form related to "difficulty" is "difficult." However, "difficulty" itself is a noun, and its verb form is typically "to struggle" or "to find difficult." You might also consider "to challenge" or "to complicate" as related verbs.
Difficult - this is not a verb just an adverb (describing the verb to be). You can say for example 'I have a difficult job'
difficulty is a noun, difficulties is a plural word of it
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 form related to "difficulty" is "difficult." However, "difficulty" itself is a noun, and its verb form is typically "to struggle" or "to find difficult." You might also consider "to challenge" or "to complicate" as related verbs.
Difficult - this is not a verb just an adverb (describing the verb to be). You can say for example 'I have a difficult job'
Frustrating can be a verb and an adjective. Verb: The past tense of the verb 'frustrate'. Adjective: Causing annoyance by great difficulty.
The verb for persistence is "persist." It means to continue firmly or obstinately in an opinion or course of action despite difficulty or opposition.
No, it is not.The word difficultly is an adverb that is virtually never used. Instead the phrase 'with difficulty' is used.The word "difficulty" is a noun. The related adjective is "difficult."
That is the correct spelling of "inconvenience" (difficulty, problem).
"Burden" can be a noun, a verb, or even sometimes an adjective. It typically refers to something that is carried, a responsibility, or a weight that causes difficulty.
That is the correct spelling eke used as the verb "to eke out" (to produce or survive despite difficulty).
No, the word 'clamber' is a verb: clamber, clambers, clambering, clambered.The verb clamber is to climb awkwardlyor with difficulty using both hands and feet.
The word "harder" is generally used as a comparative adjective, comparing the degree of difficulty between two things. It can also be used as an adverb to modify a verb, indicating that more effort or difficulty is involved in an action.
Hurtle = verb, to move at a great speed in an uncontrolled mannerin come accents/dialectsHurdle = noun, an obstacle or difficulty
"Glean" is a verb and it means "To collect information in some small amount and often with difficulty". For example:" They are going on a trip. I managed to glean that much from them".