yes
No. Hunting is a verb.
use hunting as a verb
Hunting is the present participle of the verb hunt. It can be used to create the progressive verb tenses, as an adjective, and as a gerund (verbal noun).Verb: Dave was hunting when he shot himself in the foot.Adjective: Gather up your hunting gear.Gerund: Hunting can be dangerous if you don't know what you're doing. Look at what happened to Dave.
Hunt is not an adverb; it's a verb. It means to search for something for the purpose of catching or killing it.
The verb sealing is the present participle of the verb to seal, to hunt for seals. The present participle of the verb is also a gerund (verbal noun); the noun sealing is the act of seal hunting. The present participle is also an adjective to describe a noun related to seal hunting.
If you do indeed mean 'husting', then there is no past tense of that as it is a verb. However, in case that was a typo, the past tense of 'is hustling' is 'hustled', and the past tense of 'is hunting' is 'was hunting'.
The correct verb is has.It's easier to recognize when you identify just the subject and the verb, "Larry has...".
One example of using abide as a verb is "You need to abide by the rules." Anything like this should also work. Happy hunting, Inky
No it is not. The word game is typically a noun or noun adjunct (game day, game ball, game hunting) or a verb (to play a game). There is a colloquial verb to game meaning to manipulate.
The phrase "hunting jaguar in the Amazon" is a fragment rather than a complete sentence. It lacks a subject-verb structure that would make it a complete thought. To turn it into a full sentence, you could say, "The jaguar is hunting in the Amazon."
"Where the Red Fern Grows" is a 1961 novel by Wilson Rawls about a boy who buys and trains two Redbone Coonhound hunting dogs. The verb for sending a raccoon into a tree is the tree.
"Hound" can refer to a type of dog used for hunting or tracking, as a verb it means to persistently pursue or nag someone.