No, "glory" is not a verb. It is a noun that refers to high renown or honor.
No, the noun glories is the singular form for glory, a singular, common, noun.The noun glory is an abstract noun, a word for renown or honor won by notable achievements.The noun glory is a concrete noun, a word for a flower, a morning glory, a compound noun.The word glory is also a verb (glory, glories, glorying, gloried).
The complete verb in the sentence is "should use."
A possible suffix for "glory" could be "-ful," resulting in the word "gloryful" to indicate full of glory or possessing glory.
The root word for "glorified" is "glory."
The word glory is a noun, a verb, and an interjection. Examples: Noun: The glory of a summer morning at the lake is priceless. Verb: The team had a moment to glory in the impossible goal, but still had the match to finish. Interjection: Glory be, I thought I'd never find my ring again!
No, "glory" is not a verb. It is a noun that refers to high renown or honor.
The word 'glory' is a noun, a word for high renown or honor; a word for magnificence or great beauty; a word for a thing.The word 'glory' is also a verb (glory, glories, glorying, gloried), meaning to take great pride or pleasure in.
Glory grows is the English equivalent of 'Splendor crescit'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'splendor' means 'glory'. The verb 'crescit' means '[he/she/it] does grow, grows, is growing'.
No, the noun glories is the singular form for glory, a singular, common, noun.The noun glory is an abstract noun, a word for renown or honor won by notable achievements.The noun glory is a concrete noun, a word for a flower, a morning glory, a compound noun.The word glory is also a verb (glory, glories, glorying, gloried).
The African Luhya word for the English word 'glory' is "okhwitsomia".
glory = hanohano
glory
glory = gloria
Yes it may be used as a verb. 'I do not merely enjoy being famous, I glory in it!' Here glory means to rejoice.
The complete verb in the sentence is "should use."
glory in spanish is Gloria