It can be depending on it's use in the sentence. ex: "Wake up!" Wake here is used as a verb with the subject being an understood "you." "The Smiths hosted a wake for Sandra's grandmother." In this sentence, wake is used as a direct object.
Yes, it is a verb, or at least a type of verb. Experienced is a linking verb.
A verb is an action word. 'He' is a pronoun. There are no verb variations for 'he'.
The verb
Got is an irregular verb. It is the past tense verb of "get".
Fail is the verb
The phrase "wake up" is a verb (e.g., "They will wake up the parrots early", or "They will wake them up early"). It's called a "particle verb" ("up" is the particle) or sometimes a "phrasal verb" (since it is not a single word).
The word wake is a verb. The past tense is woke.
Wake is a verb and awake is an adjective.
If I fall asleep during your uncle's wake, please wake me up.
The word woke is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb wake.
Yes - it is the past participle form of "wake"
with regard to the describtion of present perfect tense as a combination of the auxiliary verb {to have} and the past participle of the main verb which in the question in topic is wake, i would say that the present perfect tense of wake is have woken.
When something causes one to wake.
would wake up is a verb clausein the morning is a prepositional clause
"Rouse" is a verb, which means to wake someone from sleep or to stir up feelings or excitement. It is not an adverb.
No, a transitive verb is a verb describing a change of state. For example, to wake up is transitive verb as it is the act of going from being asleep to being awake. To fly is a verb of movement.
wake / wakes / waking present simple: I wake at 6:00am. She wakes at 8:00am. preset continuous; I am waking earlier these days.