Yes, manufacture is a verb.
Manufacture can be used as a verb and a noun. There is also the gerund manufacturing.
no
The word manufacture is a noun as a word for the process of making goods in large quantities in a factory. Example:They are engaged in the manufacture of glass products.The noun forms for the verb to manufacture are manufacturer and the gerund, manufacturing.
That is the correct spelling of the verb "manufacture" (make, fabricate).
Verb. "Manufactured" is the past tense and past participle of "manufacture". "Manufactured" can also be used as an adjective--manufactured home.
- verb (used with object) 1. to sell in advance, as before manufacture or construction
manufacturing is to make or process a raw material into a finished product to manufacture is the act or process of producing something so there is no difference just that manufacturing is a verb & manufacture is a noun
Manufactured is a verb (past tense of manufacture) and an adjective (manufactured goods).
Under one context it can mean produces or manufactures.
part of speech
"Machine" as a verb basically means to make or manufacture with a machine - so "machineability" means that something can be made this way.
Yes, the word 'manufacturing' is a gerund, the present participle of the verb to manufacture that functions as a noun in a sentence.The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Example uses:Manufacturing was once the main employment in our town. (noun, subject of the sentence)Several companies were manufacturing auto parts here. (verb)Our town is no longer a manufacturing center. (adjective)