The present tense of the verb "watch" is "watches".
Yes, the word watches is a noun, a plural, common, concrete noun, the singular form is a watch; for example: John received two watches as graduation gifts. The word watches is also a verb (watch, watches, watching, watched).
No, "watches" is not a preposition. It is a verb that typically describes the action of observing something over time.
We watches t.v before we went to sleep.
From the verb "expectare" expectat, meaning "he, she, it watches" or "he, she, it hopes for"
I/you/we/they have watched. He/she/it haswatched.
The object pronoun is us, the direct object of the verb 'watches'.The pronoun 'us' is the first person, plural, objective, personal pronoun.
The word 'watch' is both a noun (watch, watches) and a verb (watch, watches, watching, watched). The use of the word in a sentence determines if it is a noun or a verb.Examples:My watch was a gift from my grandfather. (noun, subject of the sentence)On Friday we're going to the park to watch the fireworks. (verb)The noun forms of the verb to watch are watcher and the gerund, watching.
"Flock" can be either a verb or a noun. Example as a verb: "Birds of a feather flock together." Example as a noun: "A shepherd watches over a flock of sheep."
The noun watch is a singular, common, noun; watch can be an abstract noun (the night watch) or a concrete noun (a wrist watch). The word watch is also a verb (watch, watches, watching, watched).
The word watched, meaning "viewed", is a past tense verb.
The noun 'watch' is a singular, common noun.The noun 'watch' is a concrete noun as a word for a timepiece carried or worn by a person.The noun 'watch' is an abstract noun as a word for a period of keeping awake to guard, protect, or attend.The word 'watch' is also a verb: watch, watches, watching, watched.The noun forms of the verb to watch are watcher and the gerund watching.