The verb is pierced.
Sure! In the sentence "She can whistle," "whistle" is the main verb and "can" is the helping (modal) verb.
A whistle is "un sifflet" in French, to whistle (verb) is "siffler"
"Mute" is another verb that can be used to describe silence.
The verb "blew" in the sentence "the watchman blew this whistle" is transitive because it requires an object ("this whistle") to complete its meaning.
No, "suddenly" is an adverb, not a verb. It is used to describe how an action takes place.
Whistles is a noun (plural of whistle) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of whistle).
I whistle when I'm scared.Sometimes, I whistle but only make a blowing sound.I whistle to keep a good mood.
Whistle can be a verb or a noun, but it is not an adjective.As a verb: He whistles happy tunes all day long.As a noun: Referees always have a whistle handy.The present participle form of whistle--whistling--can be used as an adjective. Example: Did you hear that whistlingsound?
No, the word 'suddenly' is not a verb; suddenly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb (suddenly thought, suddenly appeared).A linking verb acts somewhat like an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject (Mary is my sister. Mary=sister); or the subject becomes the object (Mary felt cold. Mary->cold). The adverb 'suddenly' can modify the linking verb: Mary suddenly felt cold.
Had
He tried to whistle a tune, but he couldn't remember the notes.
First "whistle" is a verb, as in whistle that tune. "A whistle" is a noun and being a word for something it is indeed a concrete noun.