Dance is a regular verb with transitive and intransive forms, and also it is a noun.
Verb 1. (intr) to move the feet and body rhythmically, esp in time to music 2. (tr) to perform (a particular dance) 3. (intr) to skip or leap, as in joy, etc 4. to move or cause to move in a light rhythmic way 5. dance attendance on someone, to attend someone solicitously or obsequiously
noun 1. a series of rhythmic steps and movements, usually in time to music 2. an act of dancing 3. a social meeting arranged for dancing; ball, (as modifier) a dance hall 4. a piece of music in the rhythm of a particular dance form, such as a waltz 5. dancelike movements made by some insects and birds, esp as part of a behaviour pattern 6. lead someone a dance (Brit informal) to cause someone continued worry and exasperation; play up
Dance is a Noun.
verb
The verb is dance and the past tense of dance is danced.
A verb is not a describing word, an adjective describes a noun and an adverb modifies a verb. The word dance is a noun and a verb, you would use an adjective to describe the noun dance and an adverb to modify the verb dance. Examples:Adjective/noun: I prefer a slow dance to a fast dance. We have a formal dance planned for next month.Adverb/verb: You dance beautifully. I can barely dance at all.
"Dance" is frequently used as both a verb and a noun. Examples: "They dance more gracefully than any other ballet company I have ever seen" (verb); "'The Highland Fling' is a famous Scottish dance." (noun)
Both "loves" and "to dance" are verbs.
dance - noun dancing - verb
depends what the sentence is.
Dawns (feminine noun - "a dance"). Dawnsio (verb - "to dance").
The past tense is danced. Dance is a regular verb so the past is verb + ed
Th e dance is on Friday. is is the verb. verbs describe action in a sentence.
Dance with me, please!