No, you can see it when one person 'chases' after another.
The word chasing is a verb. (It is the present participle of "chase")
chase
Chase = Jagd Pronounced 'Yagged' . That's the noun; the verb is 'jagen' - 'to chase'.
Chase is a verb, ,so chases is one.
The word chase is both a noun and a verb (chase, chases, chasing, chased). Example uses: As a noun: The chase to catch up with the bus left us breathless. As a verb: If you chase after him but he won't respect you.
No, chase isn't an adjective. It is a verb, or a noun (pursuit). It can be used as an adjunct as in the movie term "chase scene."
Seen is not an adverb, no.The word seen is a verb.
"have seen" is the verb, and it is in the present perfect tense.
The verb is "to see" and the verb phrase is "had seen."
The word chases is a form of the verb "chase", an action verb meaning either to follow or to pursue.
In pronunciation, there are two words that sound alike : CHASED (verb) - past tense of the verb ''to chase'' CHASTE (adjective) - virginal, or austere
you cant idiot