verb
'Assemblies', with reference to the plural of assembly, is spelt correctly.
Verb :)
The verb form of "table" is "to table," which means to present for discussion or consideration in a formal meeting or legislative assembly.
Assembly means like were your whole school meets in the gym or where ever.
verb
The word "congregate" can function as either a verb or a noun. As a verb, it denotes the action of people or animals gathering together in a place. As a noun, it refers to a gathering or assembly of individuals.
The simple predicate in this sentence is "spoke." It is the action verb that shows what Mr. and Mrs. Kim did at the assembly.
The verb in that statement is spoke.This is because spoke is an action. verbs are words that describe an action.Speak, speaks and speaking are also verbs.
The word 'ease' is a noun and a verb. The adjective form is easy.Examples:She tackles the chaos with such ease. (noun)Just ease into the water and let your cares drift away. (verb)The product came with easy instructions for assembly. (adjective)
Yes the word assembly is a noun. It is a common noun.
You don't so much spell it as phrase it correctly. MC++ is a noun, not a verb, so the grammatically correct phrase is "I'm coding an assembly in MC++".
If you were to say, "I need to go to my assembly ______." You would use Practice. You use practise when you are using "practice" as a verb. e.g. "I really need to practise my mathematics." (The act of doing something.) A noun is used like this... "Wow! I just missed piano practice." (An actual thing that you missed.)