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Anonymous
to imagine
Christophe Greenfeld... ∙
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I imagine.
The noun forms of the verb to imagine are imagination and the gerund, imagining.The noun forms of the verb to inform are informer, information, and the gerund, informing.
The word imagined is the past participle, past tense of the verb to imagine. The noun form for the verb imagine is imaginer, one who imagines, and the gerund (verbal noun) imagining. Another noun form is imagination.
I would imagine either: To commit villainy to perform the acts expected of a villain. or To vilify to make out to be a villain.
The noun forms of the verb to imagine are imagination and the gerund, imagining.A related noun form is image.
The word imaginary is an adjective because it describes a noun, for example, I have an imaginary friend. The verb form is imagine. Try to imagine what the world would be like if people stopped fighting with each other.
The verb imagine has a well-known adjective form, imaginary. The adverb form is "imaginably" which is far less used than its negative, which is "unimaginably" (which may be a hyperbolic self-oxymoron).
From the words quickly beautiful cat imagine you, the only one that is a verb is imagine. quickly - adverb beautiful - adjective cat - noun imagine - verb you - pronoun
Imagine is a verb that means to imagine. Dream, picture, and conceive are also synonyms for imagine and can (in part of the definitions of each) mean the same thing.
No, imagine is the verb.
No, the word 'imagine' is not a noun.The word 'imagine' is a verb: imagine, imagines, imagining, imagined.The abstract noun forms of the verb to imagine are imagination and the gerund, imagining.
I imagine that by "base form" you mean the "infinitive" of a verb. If the infinitive does not have the preposition "to" before it, it is referred to as the "bare infinitive". At least, that's the terminology I've come across when teaching English to foreigners.