Yes, it is a form of the verb "to swim." It is the present tense, third-person singular conjugation (he/she/it swims).
Verb
its a action verb.
The word 'swims' is both a noun (swim, swims) and a verb (swim, swims, swimming, swam, swum).Examples:The swims that I take every morning give me a lot of energy for the day. (noun)Jack swims every day in the pool at the health club. (verb)
definitely a verbtion. I invented that word because your too ignorant to not know that an action is a verb...
she swims nicely
The word like can be a verb, or a conjunction (meaning as, similar to), and more rarely a noun.It is arguably acting as a preposition in constructions such as "swims like a fish" (truncated clause like a fish swims).
Swim is a verb, and adjectives can't be used to describe verbs. Adverbs are used to modify verbs or explain how someone does something.Examples:He swims quickly.He swims slowly.He swims quite well.Swim can be a noun, as well.Examples of adjectives to describe swim as a noun:That was a fantastic swim!Let's go for a quick swim.
The simple past tense of swim is "swam". The past participle of swim is "swum".
it swims?
Olivia swims the fastest
swims (SWIMS)
yes