yes
A transitive verb.
Transitive verb.
The verb of intensity is intensify. As in "to intensify something".
The verb for destruction is "destroy."
The verb for adhesion is "adhere."
No. It is a verb form (to hurry) or a noun (gerund).
Hurry is already a verb since it can be used as an action. As in "to hurry".Other verbs are hurries, hurrying and hurried."I need to hurry or I will be late"."He is hurrying towards the train"."We hurried all the way there".
The word hurry is both a noun and a verb (hurry, hurries, hurrying, hurried). Example uses: Noun: She left in a hurry. Verb: You must hurry to catch that flight.
Yes. the word "along" is a preposition and sidewalk is its object noun. The prepositional phrase is "along the crowded sidewalk" and it modifies the verb "is hurrying" saying where the hurrying is taking place.
Present tense : hurrying "She was hurrying to the football game"
to stroll along without hurrying is to saunter
The Hurrying Kind - 1962 was released on: USA: 1962
pagmamadali
will hurry /will be hurrying/will have hurried/will have been hurrying.
Cur festinas?
That is the correct spelling of "hurry" (to rush or make haste).
The cast of The Hurrying Kind - 1962 includes: Michael Bell as Tom Olan Soule as Mr. Fred Welling