Verbs don't describe they are actions eg I walk or states I love.
Adjective descibe, some adjectives end in -ing. eg interesting
Adjectives that describe north: interesting - surprising - debilitating
(not sure what you mean by north maybe the north?)
calming cleansing refreshing
(particle) A passive ending used only after verbs ending with -'o' or -'u'. Kua inumia kētia te miraka."The milk has been drunk already".
In American English, a collective noun used as a unit takes _____ verbs and pronouns.
In American English, a collective noun used as a unit takes _____ verbs and pronouns.
The affix "ed" is commonly used in English to form the past tense of regular verbs, indicating an action that has already occurred. It can also function as an adjective to describe a state resulting from that action, such as in "bored" or "excited." Additionally, "ed" can denote the completion of an action or a quality derived from it.
gerunds
Shining; brightening; blinding; etc.
No verbs describe a car. A car is a noun, and verbs don't describe nouns. Adjectives describe nouns.Some adjectives that describe a car:fastloudredslowsmallyellow
verbs do NOT describe anything, adjectives describe an object, verbs are 'working" words
Verbs do not describe!
"verbs ending in ing" are gerunds. you can make a gerund out of pretty much any verb. take for example the verb "to mother." the gerund form is "mothering."
Intensive verbs describe the subject complement but extensive verbs describe what the subject does.
Verbs do not describe things- those are adjectives. Verbs are action words.
There aren't any verbs beginning with any letter that describe people. Verbs show an action. Adjectives describe people.
Adjectives describe nouns. Adverbs modify verbs.
no they describe verbs
Verbs do not describe - you would be better off with adjectives or maybe adverbs